sixstringsteve
Well-Known Member
- Location
- UT
I wheel/hike/mountain bike/dirt bike/camp so I can be in nature. Little moab has some great wheeling, but for the most part, I'll pick a scenic trail over a rock pile any day. I am an environmentalist in the sense that I care about our environment. I believe in reasonably taking care of nature. Everyone is at some point on the environmentalist scale. On one end you have people who think it's ok to dump their used oil in the nearby stream, and on the other end of the spectrum you'll find people who think that lawn mowers should be outlawed because they cause too much pollution. It's the nut-jobs who have given the term "environmentalist" a bad name.
I have a coworker at work who thinks that since I drive offroad I don't care about nature. I told him about all the service projects I've helped improve our parks with, and he was shocked and said "so you do care about the environment?" I said "absolutely, that's why I'm up there every weekend." It was a definite paradigm shift to him. He thought that the only people who care about picking up trash, putting out campfires when you leave, staying on trail, etc were hikers. I really like how U4 has taken a more pro-environment/access approach rather than an anti-SUWA approach. I think the more we can help non-wheelers realize that we do care about our native surroundings, the more people will start to see us as a force for good rather than rednecks that drive over trees, leave our trash behind, and bushwhack to find the next mud puddle.
I have a coworker at work who thinks that since I drive offroad I don't care about nature. I told him about all the service projects I've helped improve our parks with, and he was shocked and said "so you do care about the environment?" I said "absolutely, that's why I'm up there every weekend." It was a definite paradigm shift to him. He thought that the only people who care about picking up trash, putting out campfires when you leave, staying on trail, etc were hikers. I really like how U4 has taken a more pro-environment/access approach rather than an anti-SUWA approach. I think the more we can help non-wheelers realize that we do care about our native surroundings, the more people will start to see us as a force for good rather than rednecks that drive over trees, leave our trash behind, and bushwhack to find the next mud puddle.