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Leave no Trace-Ireland
Web-site

Rubbish
Non-biodegradable plastics
including drink bottles, detergent
containers, polythene bags,
fish boxes, polypropylene ropes, fishing nets,
polystyrene trays and greasy wrappings from fast
food outlets, large plastic fertilizer drums and aluminium drink
cans pervade our countryside.
Boxes and nets thrown overboard from fishing boats and ships are blown or
washed onto beaches and coves.
Beauty spots with carelessly discarded drink cans and wrappings and
cartons from fast food outlets - rubbish appears to be everywhere
nowadays
The number of walkers throwing down occasional empty water bottles
on the hills and/or stuffing wrappers and cans into cracks in rocks appears to be increasing
Some incidents are worse,
there are families who take old beds
and furniture (I have even seen a discarded po, among other bedroom items
) to the hills and quietly disgorge them in a heap
at the side of a road or in a roadside ditch.
House builders
on occasions abandon renovation rubble in similar situations.
Such random roadside dumps are frequent in ‘The Sperrins’.

Where will it end, and what can we do about
the problem? Will our
discarded non-biodegradable items continue increasing until we walk
about in our own rubbish?
Walking clubs
frown on members who discard items of any kind
during walks and most, if not all , have it in ‘black and white’
on programmes that members should
adhere to a “ Leave No Trace”
policy .
Walking clubs can improve the situation, although perhaps not to the extent of
moving furniture and old beds. Most roadside and mountain rubbish is small
scale stuff - light , easily lifted and taking up little space
One UFRC club
“ Down Danderers” held a very effective beach
clean-up walk last year near
Newcastle, aided by the local council
who supplied sacks and lifting forks
. ‘Wee Binnians’ also have litter-collection walks. Other clubs may do something
similar.
A walkway/river clean-up last spring alerted me to the staggering amount of rubbish
people discarded , doubtless most clean-up walks
would produce equally impressive? results.
Every club should have at least one specific clean-up
walk each year in an area they know well?
The activity is both more rewarding and enjoyable than might be expected.
Individual walkers could carry a small plastic
sack on walks and
collect a few plastic bottles etc. on the hills
and along country roads, perhaps some already do so? Small
contributions perhaps-but still useful.
Local councils do their best but cannot be everywhere.
Who better to collect occasional items of rubbish on the hills and byways
than us.
UFRC Clubs should lead the way ? 10 walkers on a normal day
walk could easily eliminate the small carelessness of perhaps a thousand
people.
Waste Art!!!!!

Leave nothing behind on the hills .
An article in the Daily Mail
recently states that the paths on Ben Nevis are littered with as many as a
thousand banana skins. Bananas have long been favoured as an ideal
hiking snack as they provide energy and potassium . However throw a
banana skin down and it will take anything from one to two years to
biodegrade . The following give some idea of how long it takes
various materials to biodegrade when buried , it takes longer on the
surface with fewer bacteria to aid breakdown.
Paper towels -2 to 4 weeks, Newspapers -6 weeks , Bread-1 to 2 weeks,
apple core-2 months , cardboard box -2 months
Orange peel -6 months , banana skin -1 year , aluminium can - 50 to 100
years, polystyrene packaging - 400 years , disposable nappy - 450 years .
Some of these obviously we would unlikely to take into the hills but think
about the orange peel , bananas skins, aluminium cans, plastic bottles and
yoghurt cartons. Always take them home and bin them.
Did you know ?
70% of the nation's
litter comes from the "food on the go" industry. Drink
cans and bottles accounted for 34% , followed by confectionery wrappers
16% and fast food packaging 13% . 8% was crisp packets and 10%
cigarette packets. Coca-Cola was the worst brand as percentage of
total litter, closely followed by Walkers Crisps packets .
Latest report on Beach Litter.

Fly-tipping. The
biggest litter problem of all -where and when it occurs -this example is
alongside a marked walk near Antrim.
Most of the every day plastics we use
were never found in
nature. Chemically, they are usually structured
from long chains of carbon atoms. Carbon bonds
very strongly not only to other carbon atoms but
also to many other elements such as
chlorine, fluorine and nitrogen. The problem is that
nature is poor at breaking strong bonds between carbon atoms-so we
describe these plastics as non-biodegradable. What
are the consequences? Some
are incinerated, and some recycled
but most of the plastic ever created-Many
hundreds of millions of tons-is still there
somewhere in our environment, and
factories are still churning out around 300
million tons of plastic each year.
Walk along less frequented beaches and you
will find all kinds of plastic rubbish washed up.
Thrown overboard from ships and washed down rivers
much of it ends up on our coasts, and it doesn’t
go away unless actually lifted.
Lifting alone, difficult and time consuming though it is , does not solve
the problem. Already there are beaches with
tiny grains of plastic finding their place among the tiny grains of sand.
Will we end up with plastic beaches?
We are soiling our own nest. The
marine conservation society has shown that total litter has increased by
77% since 1994 but plastic litter has increased
by 121%.
Recently, a huge garbage patch,
an accumulation of much of the world’s plastic debris,
has been found floating in the Pacific and has
doubled in size in ten years. Another has recently been discovered
in the north Atlantic with half a million bits of rubbish per square mile.
It is believed that ocean currents create these swirling garbage patches.
The number of seabirds and marine mammals
killed by choking on plastic rubbish must be
staggering. Plastic fragments also release
potentially harmful chemicals such as styrene,
DDT and polychlorinated biphenyls. Some of these
are known to cause birth defects in sea birds and others are carcinogenic.
At school,
most of us remember “food chains”. from biology
classes. Think about a food chain in the oceans.
Small fish eat polluted fragments,
they in turn are eaten by larger fish,
and larger fish are eaten by us and other creatures.
Poisons increase up the food chain and eventually
returns to us.
What can we do
as individuals?
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We need
to reject, as far as possible, plastic bags,
plastic water bottles, plastic
packaging and plastic toys. These are the main
culprits.
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Plastics we use should
always be put in an
appropriate recycling bin.
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Can we go a step further and
keep a bag handy to lift
stray packaging and plastic bottles from streets and roads
etc.
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Lobby for biodegradable plastics
made from natural materials
such as soy and corn.
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We need to report illegal
dumping of plastics to local authorities. It
is against the law.
Make no mistake,
this is becoming an environmental emergency-if not
already. Beaches, seas, rivers,
hedgerows, roadsides and food chains,
are all are being affected and evidence
shows that the problem is getting worse.
Are we as
a species likely to be suffocated by our own
rubbish.
Principles
of Outdoor Ethics (Irish version)
1. Plan Ahead And
Prepare
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Before you go,
check,
where possible if access is allowed and your activity is permitted in
the area you wish to visit
e.g.
Is your dog welcome?
Is there parking available? |
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Respect any signs, regulations,
policies and special concerns for the area that you wish to visit.
Permits may sometimes be needed
before activities on
public lands. |
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Where possible travel by
public transport and share cars. |
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Ensure that you have the skills and equipment needed for your
activity. |
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Check the weather forecast.
Prepare for changeable weather and the possibility of something going
wrong. |
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For
environmental, safety and social reasons,
but keep group
numbers small. Split large
parties into smaller groups
e.g. less than 10
ideally between 4 and 6 |
2. Be considerate of
others
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Park appropriately -avoid blocking
gateways, forest entrances or narrow roads.Remember
that farm machinery, local residents and emergency services may need
access at all times. |
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Respect landowners, land managers and their property-avoid damaging
walls and fences, do not
disturb farm animals. |
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Respect other visitors and protect the quality of their experience. |
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Avoid making loud and excessive noise.
Let nature’s
sounds prevail. |
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Support local communities e.g.
make a point of spending money in the areas you visit. |
3. Respect
farm animals and
wildlife 
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Dogs
should be kept under close control and not be brought onto hills or
farmland without the landowner’s permission. But |
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Observe wild animals and birds from a distance.
Avoid disturbing them
at
sensitive times:
mating,
nesting and raising young ( mostly between spring and early summer). |
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Never feed wildlife or farm animals.
Feeding wildlife
damages their health and
alters
natural behaviours. |
4. Keep to
durable ground
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Durable ground includes
established tracks and campsites, rock, gravel, dry grass or snow. |
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To
avoid further erosion, keep to the centre of tracks at all times. |
If camping:
·
Protect water
quality by camping at least 30m from lakes and streams.
·
Aim to leave
your campsite as you found it, or better.
In popular areas:
·
Concentrate use
on existing tracks and campsites.
·
Walk single file
in the middle of the track even when wet or muddy.
·
Keep campsites
small and discreet.
In more remote areas:
·
Disperse use
to prevent the creation of new tracks and campsites.
·
Avoid
places where impacts
are just
beginning to show.
5. Leave what you find
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Respect property.
For example,
farming or forestry machinery, fences, stone walls etc.
Leave gates as
you find them (open or closed). |
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Preserve the past: examine but
do not damage archaeological structures, old walls and heritage
artifacts e.g. holy Wells,
mine workings, monuments. |
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Conserve the present: leave
rocks, flowers, plants, animals and other natural habitats as you find
them.
Fallen trees are a valuable wildlife habitat,
do not remove them or use for firewood. |
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Avoid introducing non native plants and animals
e.g. zebra mussels in rivers and lakes. |
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Do
not build rock cairns,
structures or shelters. |
6. Dispose of waste properly
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“
If you bring it in, take it out
”
take home all litter
and leftover food ( including
teabags, fruit peel
and other biodegradable foods). |
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To
dispose of solid human waste,
dig a hole 10-12cm deep and at
least 30m
from water,
campsites or tracks. Cover and
disguise the hole when finished. |
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Bring home toilet
paper and hygiene
products. |
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When
washing yourself or your
dishes,
carry water 30m away from streams or lakes and if necessary use small
amounts of biodegradable soap.
Bring home any
solids and scatter strained
dish water. |
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For
more information on sanitation in the outdoors
read the “
Where to go in the outdoors”
leaflet |
7. Minimise the effects of fire

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Fires can cause lasting impacts
and can be devastating to forests, natural habitats and farmland. |
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When
camping use a lightweight stove for cooking. |
Where fires are permitted:
·
Use
established
fire rings
or barbecues or create a mound
fire.
·
Keep fires
small. Only use sticks that can be
broken by hand. Do not cut growing vegetation for use as firewood.
·
Avoid burning
plastics or other substances
which emit
toxic fumes.
·
Burn all fires
to ash, extinguish fires completely
and then scatter cool ashes .
·
Dead and dry
vegetation is highly flammable-do not light fires in these conditions.
·
Winds can spread
fires-exercise
extreme caution in such conditions
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