oyster_07 wrote:I do not mean this to sound aggressive or bullish, and I note that I speak generally and do not address the issue of what can sustainably be bullied and what cannot, but I contend that to say it is sometimes not possible to carry rubbish out with one's self is not accurate. I say this for two reasons:
oyster_07 wrote:(1) If one has rubbish, they most probably carried it in with them. When this was done, it was most probably full or not yet used and was therefore heavier. To carry rubbish out is easier than carrying in the item in its virgin state.
oyster_07 wrote:(2) To say something like carrying out rubbish is not possible' is a euphemistically expressing a choice not to remove it. I acknowledge it may be more difficult in some situations, but thorough planning alleviates the difficulty in both effort and choice.
icefest wrote:If your food has packaging that will turn so gross that you can't carry it, maybe don't take it?
GBW wrote:Food waste? I never have any!
north-north-west wrote:For me, there is no such thing as 'food waste' unless I spill something during preparation. What I cook, I eat, even if it's a struggle to get it all down. I eat from the pot in which I cook, and wipe the inside with a finger that gets licked clean (yeah, I know it's gross to some people but I've never gotten sick from it and walking alone means there's no-one else to see it) so there's no water or waste involved.
puredingo wrote:It read..."please bury or burn you rubbish and tins, hide your bottles like you would your sins...".
tom_brennan wrote:puredingo wrote:It read..."please bury or burn you rubbish and tins, hide your bottles like you would your sins...".
This was actually the Sydney Bush Walkers' club slogan for some years in the 1930s and 1940s. It came from a poem by Kath Mackay with help from Marie Byles.
http://sbw.ozultimate.com/wiki/194101#t ... b_s_slogan
icefest wrote:As far as I know no multi-layered plastics are recyclable in Australia, That includes thing like the cryovac packaging of steak.
tom_brennan wrote:Not sure exactly what you mean by multi-layered plastics, but plenty of plastic bags are recyclable in Australia. See
http://redcycle.net.au/redcycle/how-to-redcycle
for details of what and how.
tom_brennan wrote:but plenty of plastic bags are recyclable in Australia. See
http://redcycle.net.au/redcycle/how-to-redcycle
for details of what and how.
tom_brennan wrote:puredingo wrote:It read..."please bury or burn you rubbish and tins, hide your bottles like you would your sins...".
This was actually the Sydney Bush Walkers' club slogan for some years in the 1930s and 1940s...
ribuck wrote:tom_brennan wrote:puredingo wrote:It read..."please bury or burn you rubbish and tins, hide your bottles like you would your sins...".
This was actually the Sydney Bush Walkers' club slogan for some years in the 1930s and 1940s...
...and when the burying of tins in the bush started to become unacceptable, the SBW walks program included this little poem:
"The tins you carry in your pack
are lighter on the journey back.
Though empties are a bore to hump,
the bush is not a rubbish dump."
Lophophaps wrote:1 With very few exceptions, if you carry it in you carry it out
2 One exception is very small food particles from washed billies.
3 All litter that can safely be carried out is carried out if practical. Finding litter on the first day of a 14 day trip might be a bit much to carry.
4 In general, plastic should always be carried out. Plastics can be recycled
5 Cigarettes have chemicals than can have adverse effect s on wildlife, and should not be buried. Matches – no view expressed.
6 Litter leads to more litter, so clean up what you can.
7 Leave no trace applies.
puredingo wrote:"To the wind may your tins and rubbish scatter
for the future will not be your concern nor matter
and cairn the track, paint the rock, ribbon the tree
this is Australia where we all take for free."
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