Showing posts with label impact. Show all posts
Showing posts with label impact. Show all posts

Monday, December 6, 2010

Most Impact - Kitchen or Sleeping Area?



Thanks to all of you who posted comments on our recent Facebook question: Which area of your camp receives the most use –sleeping area or kitchen?

Generally speaking, the camp kitchen receives more impact than sleeping areas. While there are certainly exceptions to the rule, the majority of time in camp, for most groups, is spent in the kitchen area. This is particularly true if there is a fire ring in the kitchen area - think about all those feet moving around the campfire trying to avoid the smoke ("I hate white rabbits, I hate white rabbits..."). For most sleeping areas, whether using a tent or not, there is generally minimal impact in terms of trampling, scuffing, micro-trash, damaging disturbance of vegetation, etc. Whereas in the kitchen, it's the gathering place, especially when you're with a larger group. The kitchen is where not only the cooking takes place but also where groups tend to congregate, socialize, move around, walk around, sit, stand, scuff feet, etc.



From the Leave No Trace North American Skills & Ethics Booklet:

Wherever you camp, use surfaces that are resistant to impact such as rock outcrops, sand, gravel, dry grasses, snow or water.

Concentrate use in popular areas. In popular areas, concentrate use on trails, established campsites, and other developed sites such as trailheads and picnic areas. Concentrating use in these areas and, if necessary, on the surfaces mentioned earlier, will minimize disturbances to soils and vegetation. Because animals learn to expect people on trails, they’re less disturbed by encounters with people on-trail than off.

Use established campsites. Choose a well-established campsite that’s big enough for your group. Some popular areas have officially designated campsites, shelters or platforms. Use of these amenities can reduce damage to vegetation and other natural features. Where campsites are not formally designated, look for and use sites where the ground cover is already worn away. Wear soft-soled shoes and concentrate your activities in the center of the site to avoid enlarging it.

In bear country, it is advisable to separate the sleeping and cooking areas. Otherwise, tents, packs, gear, and the kitchen area should be concentrated in one area on previously compacted, naturally resistant, or reinforced surfaces. This approach protects surrounding vegetation and prevents development of “satellite” sites.

Also consider your visual impact on other users or wildlife. Take advantage of opportunities to tuck your tent out of view behind natural screening such as trees or rocks.

Good campsites are found, not made. What makes the perfect campsite? Safety, privacy, and comfort never go out of style, and securing such amenities does not entail a major remodeling effort. We can bring our own lightweight furniture and conveniences along to eliminate the need to create them on-site. Camp stoves, mattresses, tables, chairs, lanterns—even solar showers—are readily available at reasonable prices, and they pack in and out with ease.

Leave your campsite clean and natural looking—naturalize it. In wildlands, we are visitors, but we are also hosts to those who follow. They will notice our hospitality, or lack of it. Litter, graffiti, tree damage, visible human and pet waste, unsightly fire rings and the like are senseless acts. By taking the time to pick up after ourselves and others, if necessary, we’ll all benefit.

Even in campsites, leave the area as natural as possible. Breaking off a tree branch for firewood creates an ugly scar and opens the tree to disease. Proper firewood collection is discussed under Minimize Campfire Impacts.

Disperse use in pristine areas. Proliferation of trails and campsites has alarmed both resource managers and travelers across North America. Even where visitor use has remained relatively stable, such as the Spanish Peaks Wilderness, MT, campsites are sprouting up in traditionally low use areas. Visit remote or pristine areas only if you are committed to Leave No Trace in that environment. Using established routes, trails and campsites is always preferable to pioneering new ones.

Campsites. Select the most durable camping location possible. In pristine areas, pre-existing camping spots, even those that are lightly used, should be left alone to recover. Before unpacking your tent, look for obvious bird nesting activity and other signs of animals. Choose an area that seems safe, free of wildlife, and well suited to low-impact camping. Look for a large rock slab, a graveled area, or other equally durable space to locate your kitchen. Concentrate your activities on this surface whenever possible to protect more fragile areas. If necessary, reserve less durable ground for your sleeping area.

In pristine areas, impacts can often be avoided by staying only one night. In these areas, vary your route to water, to the “bathroom” and to sleeping areas to prevent trails from forming. In general, manage your activity to avoid harming the natural features of the site, especially those that do not regenerate or do so very slowly—such as lichens and trees.

Breaking camp. Before departing, naturalize and disguise the site by replacing any rocks or sticks you may have moved. Re-cover scuffed-up areas with leaf litter or pine needles. Fluff up matted grass and make the place less obvious as a campsite. As long as overall visitor use is very low, the site will retain its best qualities. Ideally, no trails or campsites will be created if visitors disperse their activities.


Obviously every camping situation is different, and depending on your particular style you may create more or less impact than another group in your kitchen and/or sleeping area. However, knowing how to make the best decisions with regards to where you locate your kitchen and sleeping area, i.e. using durable surfaces, previously impacted surfaces, designated sites, etc., will go a long way towards minimizing your overall impact.

Monday, August 30, 2010

Art or Impact - Part II

Remember this blog post: Art or Impact?

Apparently there was action taken: The stones were removed by the land managers, and the area was fenced off.






Is this the best solution?

Monday, June 21, 2010

Art or impact?



Recently hiked by this on a heavily used trail in the foothills above Boulder, CO and it got me thinking - is this impact or art?

Monday, November 17, 2008

What is the worst impact you've ever seen?

Having spent many weeks per year in the out-of-doors over the past several decades, I have seen a lot of recreation-related impacts. Some mild, some horrific. Some due to malicious intent, others due to ignorance. Over the past year I've seen a few impacts that have rivaled anything I've ever seen before. Big fires, serious erosion, invasive species, pet waste and litter. As with all impacts, it's not the one time someone builds a big fire or the one time someone leaves litter behind. It's the cumulative impact of people doing the same things over and over again that begins to add up and create serious problems.

What impacts have you seen?

A few pictures: tamarisk, an invasive species, along a river in Utah; impacts from a beach fire and graffiti carved in a rock slab:





Wednesday, November 7, 2007

Giant Sequoias

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

I just learned that Giant Sequoias are more amazing than I had ever realized. These magnificent species grow up to 300 ft. tall. They move one full ton of water up their trunk every day. The oldest specimens are approximately 3000 years old. They are some of the largest organisms on the planet. These trees have both significant ecological and spiritual value, and are truly one of the most unique species on earth. However, as the story so commonly goes, they're in peril. Threatened by global warming and eventual water deficits that are predicted to come with rising temperatures. If the Giant Sequoias don't have enough water, like most living things, they'll die. It truly saddens me to think that of what we've done to so many species on our planet in such a short time. 

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

Though it's sometimes hard to find the silver lining when things seem out of control and beyond the crisis point, you have to look for it. There is a silver lining to the story of the Giant Sequoias. Scientists are working on the problem from a variety of angles. They're studying Giant Sequoias more now than ever. Their research methods have changed. The data is better, and we now know how to better protect these giants. There are also more positive large-scale changes occurring to combat the bigger issue of human-caused climate change: hybrid cars, reduced emissions, greater awareness of environmental issues, more focus by government, industry and the general public.

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

As stewards of the land, I think we need to do all we can to protect our environment. Be it from recreational impacts or impacts that are more global in scale. If we can collectively work to minimize our footprint on the environment - at the micro and macro levels - we're all going to be better off in the long run. Especially those Giant Sequoias.