Nessmuk
Active member
Speaking in the strictest terms of "black and white" LNT (meaning as taught with no room for judgement for thinking beings).... here is the root of the ethical rationale:bikehikeskifish said:What is the actual issue with tossing biodegradable garbage like apple cores and banana peels? The latter do not break down as fast as the former, but eventually are gone. Most cyclists would never toss a foil power par / gel packet and many will stop if one is accidentally dropped. Most think nothing of tossing a banana peel or apple core.
Is it because the item is not native?
Is it because nobody wants to see them while they degrade or get scavenged?
I toss the same items in the compost pile and either they get scavenged by the local critters or turn into a nice fertilizer for the following year.
- That's right, banana peels are not native. Same thing with orange peels, which take a very long time to degrade (citrus oil is a mild bug/critter repellent), although apple cores are gone very soon. Ethically you shouldn't introduce something into the environment that is not natively produced. These days the DEC doesn't even want you to bring in non-regional firewood because of the non-native bugs it might contain.
-Of course no one wants to see them degrade. Is one apple core tossed beside the trail OK? How about 2, or 6 orange peels left just off the trail by a hiking group not far from a lean-to? Who makes the "experienced judgement" of how much, and how far?
-The critters that might find a lucky meal on garbage that you toss aside get a one time bonus in life. Or maybe it is a bonus every weekend that someone comes by the same spot. Yes, their life may be extended and they might even get to reproduce once or twice more... until the season is over and suddenly there is no more free lunch. Then what? Or suddenly we have a "habituated bear" problem with starving critters of all sizes. (I reiterate, this is the B/W version of LNT teaching). Would this happen with a once or twice cast apple core? Probably not, but you are not the only hiker out there. Your maintained compost pile next to your house is a different story.
There is latitude in LNT teaching for one time dispersal of food waste, a technique used only in truly primitive sites where a one time broad scattering of minimal food debris is not going to upset the natural food balance. This allows for your rarely cast aside apple core along the trail if it is a truly random location.
So those are the roots of the tossing of garbage no-no. Again, LNT is an education process, sometimes taught with a little too much B/W, yes/no firmness. You are supposed to understand the main ideas (take the course), and then apply rationale and environmental ethics to what you do to the environment.
Having said that, yes I do toss aside my apple core far beyond the trail's edge when I am not anywhere near a campsite. But I always carry out my banana and orange peels.
Take the course, understand the root rationale behind some of the ideas that in the strict B/W sense may seem excessively unreasonable. Then you can apply experienced judgement.
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