Mud Bug
Hand made things are better
In reading Norm Hein's thread, "Stopover in Wisconsin," I went to the Sylvania Wilderness area's website. In their restrictions, rules or whatever you wanna call them, they say people are not allowed to bring glass, foam or metal food or beverage containers into the preserve:
"Metal or glass food or beverage containers, including deposit bottles, cans and foam containers may not be taken into the wilderness."
On their video they show people actually emptying canned food into a plastic container. (Not exactly sure how that will keep for the folks.) Is this the trend these days for government parks and such? Is plastic considered better for the environment now than metal? I understand the reasoning behind glass, obviously (and I don't bring it on a river), but I don't understand the pro-plastic. I thought plastic water bottles were anti-environment. I find it hard to believe they're better than metal, but apparently that's what Michigan, at least, is promoting. What about metal canteens? Are they not, um, "environmentally friendly" anymore?
Is this the new version of being good to the environment? And do people follow this example on rivers and wilderness in general?
I was raised to "smash and bury what will decay (paper, food cans, human waste, fish guts, etc.) and pack out what won't; leave nothing visible behind." My dad carried a folding shovel just for that. Is that no longer acceptable?
I do not mean this to be a political discussion. I just wanna know how society is viewing this topic these days. Don't want any ugly glares from fellow campers.
"Metal or glass food or beverage containers, including deposit bottles, cans and foam containers may not be taken into the wilderness."
On their video they show people actually emptying canned food into a plastic container. (Not exactly sure how that will keep for the folks.) Is this the trend these days for government parks and such? Is plastic considered better for the environment now than metal? I understand the reasoning behind glass, obviously (and I don't bring it on a river), but I don't understand the pro-plastic. I thought plastic water bottles were anti-environment. I find it hard to believe they're better than metal, but apparently that's what Michigan, at least, is promoting. What about metal canteens? Are they not, um, "environmentally friendly" anymore?
Is this the new version of being good to the environment? And do people follow this example on rivers and wilderness in general?
I was raised to "smash and bury what will decay (paper, food cans, human waste, fish guts, etc.) and pack out what won't; leave nothing visible behind." My dad carried a folding shovel just for that. Is that no longer acceptable?
I do not mean this to be a political discussion. I just wanna know how society is viewing this topic these days. Don't want any ugly glares from fellow campers.