GPSGuided wrote:Has it ever been scientifically studied? My instinct is to say that it should not be concentrated on one spot/plant... Over a high cliff and track so that it's atomised before reaching the ground, just like fuel dump from an aircraft.
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Walking_addict wrote:The main thing is to ensure your Goretex or silnylon poncho is well out of the way through the process !!
Walking_addict wrote:As mentioned, it doesn't bother plants one way or the other.
GPSGuided wrote:Walking_addict wrote:As mentioned, it doesn't bother plants one way or the other.
According to the wiki on urine, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urine
'Undiluted urine can chemically burn the roots of some plants'
GPSGuided wrote:Nice study but a local study. Can it be extrapolated to all bushwalking locations Australia or worldwide?
Nuts wrote:I caught a news piece on researchers from UQ examining human waste for chemical constituents /medical markers, some interesting implications from such large samples. There's no denying our output is particularly unnatural, even among the domesticated animals.. Still, given the numbers of walkers (at places, here at least, not nearly as busy as Pelion Hut), it's probably more the implications for managing (& or educating) large numbers of people, concentrating them in campsites and huts. In WHA, while any such impact is unnecessary, there's work to be done.
I guess it is something even experienced walkers wouldn't think much about? In popular campsites, taking a leak close by?
I had in mind the hordes of first timers, not necessarily yet 'bushwalkers'
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