Pubdate: Sun, 19 Mar 2000 Source: Denver Post (CO) Copyright: 2000 The Denver Post Contact: 1560 Broadway, Denver, CO 80202 Fax: (303) 820.1502 Website: http://www.denverpost.com/ Forum: http://www.denverpost.com/voice/voice.htm Author: Mike McPhee Bookmark: MAP's link to Colorado articles is: http://www.mapinc.org/states/co RAVES SPARK CULTURE SHOCK DOWN ON COLORADO'S FARMS March 19 - ARRIBA - Bill Hill's job at the D-J Petro Food Store usually doesn't begin too quickly. He opens the little store, the only one in this farming town of 250, at 6 a.m. on Sundays, starts the coffee brewing, unwraps the bundle of newspapers, turns on the gas pumps. Usually no one's around, and he likes that. He works weekdays at the Arriba Grain Elevator, and on Sundays he's pretty tired. He needs time alone to get the sleep out of his head. But late last month, Hill got the surprise of his life when he turned into the station. The place was swarming with nearly 100 kids, some with spiked orange hair, their faces painted neon yellow. Some were tattooed. Many had pierced their eyebrows, lips, tongues, and, Hill imagined, some places he didn't want to know about. One young man had dyed his spiked hair bright blue, to match his shirt. Some of them had infant pacifiers, either in their mouths or hanging from their necks on beaded necklaces. Their cars, with license plates from many states, were lined up four deep at each of the eight gas pumps. Once Hill opened the door, the kids bought every bottle of water, soda, juice and tea - anything they could find to drink. They bought out all the cigarettes, potato chips, snacks and sandwiches. The store had its best day ever, and all before 8 a.m. The swarm of customers had just left an all-night "rave" party held 5 miles north up a dirt road at Ron Brent's farm. An estimated 4,000 people showed up that Saturday night, and danced themselves weary until dawn Sunday. Now they were headed home, and some were clueless. "Could you tell me what direction is New Mexico?" one young girl asked timidly. Two girls said they had driven all the way from South Dakota and were not looking forward to driving home. The customers were thirsty from the dancing, but also from taking ecstasy, an illegal drug that's becoming popular among the younger partying crowd. It's hard to estimate, but the partyers guess that between 40 and 50 percent of a rave crowd is "rolling" on ecstasy. Also known as X, it's a form of methamphetamine that reportedly heightens the senses and makes touching and dancing far more pleasurable. The drug also is reputed to create an oral fixation, hence the pacifiers, and a terrific thirst, hence the need for water, juice or other liquids. People say they don't like to drink alcohol while on ecstasy because it diminishes the effect of the drug. The crowds, estimated to be between the ages of 13 and 30, have the stamina and energy to dance well into the night. But when thousands of them gather, the parties easily last until dawn. Finding a place to host parties of that size, with deafening music that lasts until dawn, is a challenge, at best. Many are held in urban areas in warehouses, abandoned buildings or empty shopping malls. Police watch for them, and shut them down when they find them. So promoters become more and more creative in their search for a rave location, looking even to farms. When Mike Knutson, who works for a Denver rave promoter, offered his grandfather, Ron Brent, $2,000 for the use of his farm for a party, the offer looked good. Brent's son, Dan, who works the 4,000-acre farm and negotiated with the promoters, said wheat prices are the lowest in 25 years and estimated that in one night his family earned the same profit it would from farming 100 acres of wheat. The orange hair and pierced eyebrows didn't look so bad. But it set the town to talking. Roughly 40 miles east of Limon, Arriba is a two-hour drive from both Denver or Colorado Springs. Farmers, pretty conservative by nature, looked askance at their punkish, urban visitors, and scratched their brows. "We don't get a lot of them people out here," said Chopper McHugh, owner of Arriba Grain. "When I first saw all the cars, I thought it was a funeral. We don't get a line of cars like that until someone's stiffening up." One of his lunch partners laughed. "They're not bad people. The worst part about it is having to look at them," he said, not wanting his name in the paper. Hill didn't mind the gaudy newcomers, either. "I got three drive-offs right away, so I made everyone else prepay," he said. "Most of them wanted $5 to $12 worth of gas, all the money they had. For the most part, they were pretty decent and polite." The party was held in a 70-by100-foot metal equipment shed with a concrete floor. Organizers brought in a generator, lights and sound system. They also brought in dozens of portable toilets, and hundreds of cases of bottled water and fruit juice, which sold for $3 a bottle. Flag men, with reflective vests and flashlights, were placed on the dirt roads to direct traffic to the farm. Although the temperature dropped to 24 degrees, partyers said they stayed warm from the sheer mass of dancing bodies, packed tightly in the uninsulated shed. The Colorado State Patrol estimated there were about 1,200 cars, which completely overwhelmed the eight troopers available that morning. "We had no idea it was coming. The first we heard about it was around 9 p.m.," said Trooper Sgt. Robert Brossart of the Limon barracks. "We had one car in the area, and nothing really happened until about 3:30 a.m. "We were overwhelmed," Brossart said. "Some cars were clocked at a very high rate of speed, but there was nothing we could do. We couldn't stop everybody." The first of five accidents was reported at 3:30 a.m. when a car missed a curve on the dirt road and rolled over. Only one person was treated for injuries, said Lincoln County Sheriff Leroy Yowell. "They weren't under the influence. Most of them were just too tired to drive," he said. "Two kids were arrested for possessing drugs, one for ecstasy and one for marijuana." Hill said it was a wonder no one died. "It scares the hell out of me," he said. "There were 3,000 city kids driving down a gravel road. One farmer told me he was driving at 55, and some kids passed him on a hill." Raves, in general, are becoming highly popular with the younger crowd. They are difficult to track because of their secretive nature, but the Internet carries announcements and information for about half a dozen Denver-area parties every weekend. Some of them can be extremely profitable for the promoters. Ryan Rushing, who produced the "Pegasus" rave in Arriba, wouldn't talk. But Knutson, who put Rushing together with his farmer grandfather, and other people familiar with raves confirmed the opportunities. Rushing presold a small number of tickets for $15 and $20 each. The vast majority of tickets found in the building the next day were stamped $25, and many partyers told townspeople they had paid $30 at the door to get in. In rough figures, if 4,000 people paid an average of $25, that's $100,000 in ticket receipts. Knutson said expenses for the party were $38,000, including the disc jockeys, the generator, fencing, security, and so on. The farmer, Ron Brent, was paid $2,000 for use of his property, according to his son. That calculates comfortably to about $50,000 in profits. Knutson, however, said Rushing "did slightly better than break-even," although he wouldn't elaborate. Raves are custom-made for those who want to dance and socialize but may be too young for nightclubs that serve alcohol. The unstructured, wholesale nature of hundreds of kids packed into a tractor barn or an abandoned warehouse also appeals to their rebellious side. Larger raves typically don't announce their locations until perhaps 24 hours before the event. Announcements, posted in music stores, head shops and clothing stores, list a telephone number for the party location complete with directions. Arriba was just the latest locale. Despite the unexpectedly profitable morning at the D&J, Hill isn't looking forward to another invasion. "If it happens again," Hill said with a laugh, "I told the boss I'm just going to keep on driving, and keep the store closed." - --- MAP posted-by: Eric Ernst