Bob Kittredge
Active member
And then there was the time I was just starting down Tucks from the summit when some maniac launched himself from the edge of the parking lot in a parasail and glided down toward Pinkham.
jrbren said:I disagree. Planes or any motorized vehical is going to have a much greater impact on the surrounding environment then any hiker. I think we need places to escape the mechanized world. I have never heard even the loudest loudmouth from several miles away, which you can easily hear planes from that distance. I assume a helicopter would have equal rights as a plane ? These are even louder, and probably better for sightseeing because they can hover and some have see through floors. If planes are let in, why not helicopters (that debate would surely surface)? I know these tours do exist in the Canadian rockies. Would your statement also apply to ATVers wishing a ride to the summit ? A bit off topic maybe, I am not trying to dump on you, just taking your statement at face value.
Who do we need to be ?
ripple said:My statement at face value stands!
THe mountains do not belong to hikers. We share them with everybody who enjoys the outdoors. Skiers, snowmobilers, hunters, hikers, sightseers. If someone wants to see it from a plane good for them. Leaving the mechanized world is a great thing, but speaking for myself an airplane's noise for few minutes is not taking away a thing. I am not meditating on the summit. Maybe some of these sightseers need to leave thier urban world and the plane is the only way they can do it.
The envrinomental impact of an airplane is what? Buring some fuel, (which we all do to drive to the trail head), and some noise pollution. I am not a pilot and really don't know of any other environmental impact a plane might have, unless of course it crashes.
As for "who do we need to be"..... I know I have no right to tell somebody they can't enjoy going in a plane b/c a few hikers don't like the noise. If you think you are that important of a person to tell people they don't have the right to enjoy the outdoors, well then you go ahead. What if someone thought hikers should stay out of the woods b/c trails are not natural and the impact hikers have. It is called sharing. A little give and a little take. Put someone else shoes on and see their side.
Pete_Hickey said:So, now I will ask the question, If an area is declared to be a Wilderness area, should planes be allowed to fly over it?
Pete Hickey said:So, now I will ask the question, If an area is declared to be a Wilderness area, should planes be allowed to fly over it?
Doc McPeak said:It takes a lot of nerve for someone who hikes up Wrigcht Peak and steals a piece of the downed B-47 for a souvenir to complain about anything to do with airplanes! I've never been buzzed on any summit. Maybe they leave those of us who practice LNT alone?!
Neil said:The wording in the above quote makes it sound like I went up with malice aforethought and pulled (stole) a piece right off the wreck. In fact, and I indicated it in that thread (Oct or Nov '04), I chanced upon the chunk while ascending Wright’s slide. It lay in a crack under some foliage 1/2 way from the top and it was incredibly flukey to spot it.
I'm merely setting the record straight. I don't need to defend my actions. It's my personal business what I do when I see a chunk of plane wreckage or a pair of antlers. Like you say, hike your own hike, I'll hike mine. I assume the LNT "ethic" is behind your agressive tone. If you want to take this further PM me.Doc McPeak said:The fact that you're actually trying to defend your actions certainly illuminates which type of hiker you are.
afka_bob said:So, for a real wilderness experience, is at least seeing a plane (if not arriving in one) almost required?
I read somewhere that in the wilderness man is a visitor but does not remain. I think there was some other stuff about construction. I use to take a train into the CDN wilderness a couple of times a year. No one questioned the fact that where we were going was the Wilderness. Yet there was a train track running through it. The high peaks wilderness region, in spite of its encoded designation, is not my idea of wilderness. Too many people, too many internal combustion engines (mine included), too many rules, too much human pressure.afka_bob said:If the plane is disturbing a fair number of people, than is it in any way a wilderness (i.e, can it be any kind of wilderness with that many people in it?)?
So, for a real wilderness experience, is at least seeing a plane (if not arriving in one) almost required?