"There's too many of us, there's too many of us there's too many of us."
-Lee Ving, FEAR
I am not sure who said it but earlier in this thread someone mentioned the increased numbers taking to the trails. Whether by foot, bike, motorcycle, 4WD or whatever there are more and more out in the world of remote places. (When I came to the mainland in '87 there were so few people traveling in the marquis BLM spots I visited that I was shocked.) I am from Hawaii- I think it's an important example of land management vs. development/ population growth/ access issues; nothing hones consequences like an island- we in Hawaii were where the mainland is now in the seventies with regards to land use, there always seemed enough land or resources then to develop or somehow bend things to man's will. I wish I could say that all the decisions made since I was a kid on Oahu were good ones- they weren't but I believe now that folks finally have a handle on learning to better live within Hawaii's environmental means. We aren't always doing it but the trend is positive, people are beginning to grasp what it means to live on an island.
I also believe difficult decisions have to be made everywhere in the US (and abroad) to preserve what little undeveloped environment we have left regardless of a place's popularity with any interest group, be it rock collectors or the mining industry, mountain bikers or hardcore wheelers: once wild places are lost they are lost along with the ecosystems they comprised. And if ever there were a time to understand that we are all of us in this together, every person, animal and plant part of a greater whole, it is now. We have become accustomed to conditions as we have always known them even as we fail to see that the larger picture obligates that we change our expectations in response to our changing environment. Like many of you I have been camping out of my truck since before it was called "overlanding" (which I think is sort of silly but that's a different topic) and I have become accustomed to being able to travel freely in places in the western US that I have been traveling to since I moved to the mainland close to 25 years ago. I also backpack, surf and spearfish and in all of these pursuits I see environmental degradations- just as I see them in my camping trips. And in most every case I see the cause of these degradations is overuse of those environments whether by individual, group or corporation. Twenty-five years isn't a long time and the changes in some of the places I love have been dramatic. Those of you that remember, compare the Death Valley or Mono Lake of a quarter century ago to today- I would argue that sheer numbers of visitors have impacted these and many other places for the worse. Certainly managing this traffic is critical to these and many other places' survival, never mind managing raw materials interests like mining companies in the desert SW or logging concerns in the NW.
I am sure that there are folks that want to crawl down my throat with arguments about preservation mismanagement, call me a lefty-commie whatever and who wouldn't share a cup of coffee with me for those last two paragraphs but the reality is that there are too many of us and we are living beyond our environmental means. Call me what you will (and I am sure you will!) but at this point in human history sacrificing access here and there for a greater good seems the least we can do for our own sake and the sake of those who will come after us. We may not return things to a halcyon state of imagined perfection, humans have been degrading the environment since we began our ascent as the most influential creature on the planet (here in the contiguous US from the Native Americans to Lewis & Clark to the great post WWII Westward migration) but we can make decisions to temper our influence and for me at least if that means parking my truck and shouldering my pack to get where I'd like to go, so be it. And to those that argue for the handicapped and aged I say tough ****- we all have to make concessions to our capabilities, I would love to still be skating pools but I know that my body is no longer capable of it. I don't like that but I live with it and do the things that I can, life is full of concessions and trade-offs and there are many amazing places mobility impaired folks can go. And I'd REALLY like to still be able to skate pools!
One of the great successes that I know in making unpopular changes for the greater good came with fishing prohibitions (not restrictions- prohibitions) at the Diamond Head end of Waikiki. When I was young these reefs were largely dead and none of my friends nor I thought of diving them, practically no one did, they had been fished out. Nonetheless the prohibition was unpopular- largely because fishing had almost never been prohibited before in Hawaii. Today thanks to these prohibitions the reefs are teeming with fish like I have never known. There are very specifically coordinated windows during the year where very specific fish are allowed to be taken. Something that was dead has been restored and the consequences have been great for nearby reefs as well, reefs that can be fished with less restriction. Certainly there are now rules where once there weren't and people have had to learn to live with this but I think that you'd be hard pressed to find anyone who thinks that turning the clock back to the time of the old dead reefs is a good idea. We have to learn to live within our means....
All of us reading this thread can certainly agree that the earth is an incredible place that has evolved amazing environments. From rain forests to deserts and everything in between when we take the time to look even the most mundane bug is pretty incredible. Isn't that why we all go camping? fishing? hunting? And isn't protecting that worth suffering the indignities of being restricted from always being able to drive everywhere? And when it comes to REI, who cares? They are really at a basic level only stoking consumerist ideas that may not be forever supportable either. Fix stuff, buy it used, buy seconds and last year's stuff at Campmor when you really need something new- go check it out at REI to see if it fits or whatever. Military surplus is awesome, it's pretty easy to camp like a king on the cheap thanks to government waste! I'm still using a twenty year old backpacking tent, it's been restitched and is heavier than what might be out there today but it still works so I'm not going to ditch it. Take the low impact ethos off the trail and to hell with REI, there are enough folks between this forum, MUD and the million backpacking forums that I bet everyone could get the things they need from those that no longer need them and for less dough just exchanging things on the classifieds. I'm no ascetic either- I camp pretty high on the hog without REI except for a lantern mantel here or there because they are six blocks from my house. Hell, my local hardware store blows their white gas price out of the water!
Thanks for reading, let the hating begin! I can't wait to hear the names....
J
You can hate me on MUD too- I don't often post here, I'll be easier to find there! Same name, same truck.