Organizers of Burning Man festival pony
up for ranch in Nevada
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[June 11, 2016]
(Reuters) - Organizers of Burning
Man, an annual counter-culture festival that climaxes with the burning
of a wooden effigy in the Nevada desert, has bought a ranch in the
southwestern state to run year round art and self expression activities,
the group said on Friday.
Funded by donations from supporters, Burning Man paid $6.5 million
for Fly Ranch, a 3,800-acre (1,538-hectare) property about 20 miles
north of Gerlach, Nevada, it said on its website.
The festival, which has drawn more than 60,000 participants to
create a temporary city in northern Nevada's Black Rock Desert, will
remain in its current location and not move to the ranch, the
organizers said.
"As a year-round site, Fly Ranch has the potential to expand Burning
Man Project's activities and existing programs, as well as amplify
Burning Man's cultural impact into the wider world beyond Black Rock
City," the group behind the festival said on the website.
Fly Ranch has a geothermal geyser releasing a continuous stream of
water, as well as wetlands, spring-water pools and sagebrush, the
Web post said. It is not immediately open to the public.
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Fly Ranch, recently bought by the Burning Man Project, is pictured
in this undated handout photo, in Nevada. Burning Man
Project/Handout via REUTERS
This year's Burning Man festival is set to take place between Aug.
28 and Set. 5 in the Black Rock Desert.
The festival attracts artists and a large contingent of technology
workers from Silicon Valley, among others.
(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles; Editing by Simon
Cameron-Moore)
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