Reuters Participants wear face masks and goggles to protect themselves during a dust storm in the midst of the Burning Man.

Much like the festival itself, tickets for Burning Man appeared — and now they are gone.

The 30,000 festival passes available during the main sale sold out in just 35 minutes, the Reno Gazette Journal reported. The massive gathering in the Nevada desert, which began in California with just a few hundred attendees in 1986, has sold out each year since 2011.

Tickets were sold at $425, plus taxes and fees, and 10,000 vehicle passes were sold at $80 each, plus taxes and fees.

This year’s festival runs from August 27 to September 4.

Okay, that's all, folks. If you didn't get tickets, all is not lost! See https://t.co/HRmrhBrGkJ to figure out what to do next. — Burning Man (@burningman) March 29, 2017

If you didn’t score a ticket, don’t set fire to that massive papier-mâché sunflower you were planning to bring just yet — there is still hope! An additional 500 tickets ― at $1,200 each ― will be released on April 5. The festival accepts applications for its low-income ticket program until April 17. And if you’re still without a pass, the OMG sale on August 2 will give you one last shot.

As is often the case for events in high demand, tickets are available at double face value or more on third party resale sites such as StubHub.

Jim Urquhart / Reuters An aerial view of Burning Man 2015 "Carnival of Mirrors" arts and music festival in the Black Rock Desert of Nevada, September 2, 2015.