NOLS Soft Paths: Enjoying the Wilderness Without Harming It
By David Cole, Rich Brame and Dana Watts
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About this ebook
• New research and field experience prescribe better minimum-impact techniques for wilderness use
• Expanded information on camping practices
• How far you should camp from water, where to pitch your tent, how to build a fire or if you should build one in the first place
• Respecting and caring for wildlands, doing your part to protect our limited resources and future recreation opportunities
• Trampling, litter, waste disposal, fire use, wildlife health, and protecting cultural resources
David Cole
David Cole has been interested in math since he was a very young boy. He pursued degrees in math and computer science and has shared this love of math at many levels, including teaching at the college level, coaching elementary math teams, and running a summer math camp. He also has a love of writing and has written a number of plays that have been performed. The Math Kids was born of a desire to combine his interests and exercise both sides of his brain at the same time. Find him on his website or on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn.
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Book preview
NOLS Soft Paths - David Cole
NOLS
SOFT PATHS
Enjoying the Wilderness
Without Harming It
Fourth edition
Rich Brame and David Cole
with original text by Bruce Hampton
Illustrations by Denise Casey
STACKPOLE
BOOKS
Long a mainstay of my personal and professional library, Soft Paths provides an ethical and scientific case for practices vital to wilderness stewardship—it’s required reading for many of my classes.
—Christopher Monz, PhD
Associate Professor of Recreation Resource
Management, Department of Environment and Society, Utah State University
"Soft Paths is a timely and important reminder of our responsibility to remain good citizens of the natural community of which we are a part. The wilderness and outdoor experience remains a vital source of our physical and mental health and a core of our humanity."
—Stephen R. Kellert, PhD
Tweedy Ordway Professor Emeritus, Senior
Research Scholar, Yale University School Forestry & Environmental Studies
"We will not walk lighter on the land if we only see it as a place to put our feet. Reading Soft Paths improves our vision."
—Daniel L. Dustin, PhD
Professor and Chair, Department of Parks,
Recreation, and Tourism, University of Utah
Copyright © 2011 by The National Outdoor Leadership School
Published by
STACKPOLE BOOKS
5067 Ritter Road
Mechanicsburg, PA 17055
www.stackpolebooks.com
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. All inquiries should be addressed to Stackpole Books, 5067 Ritter Road, Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania 17055.
Cover design by Caroline Stover
Cover photograph by Rich Brame
Printed in China
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
The print edition of this title was manufactured to FSC standards using paper from responsible sources
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Hampton, Bruce.
NOLS soft paths: enjoying the wilderness without harming it / Rich Brame and David Cole; with original text by Bruce Hampton; illustrations by Denise Casey. — 4th ed.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN-13: 978-0-8117-4502-4 (ePub)
ISBN-13: 978-0-8117-0684-1 (pbk.)
ISBN-10: 0-8117-0684-2 (pbk.)
1. Outdoor recreation—Environmental aspects—United States. 2. Wilderness areas—Environmental aspects—United States. I. Brame, Rich. II. Cole, David. III. National Outdoor Leadership School (U.S.) IV. Title. V. Title: National Outdoor Leadership School soft paths.
GV191.4.H36 2011
333.78—dc22
2010054457
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Contents
Foreword
About This Edition
Acknowledgments
1 The Case for Minimum Impact
2 Backcountry Travel
3 Selecting and Using a Campsite
4 Fires and Stoves
5 Sanitation and Waste Disposal
SPECIAL ENVIRONMENTS
6 Deserts
7 Rivers and Lakes
8 Coasts
9 Alpine and Arctic Tundra
10 Snow and Ice
11 Bear Country
12 Horsepacking
Final Thoughts
Further Reading
Index
We have met the enemy and he is us.
—Pogo by Walt Kelly
Foreword
When I first read Soft Paths in 1995, I was working in the outdoor recreation field for the first time. I grew up in Colorado, spent much of my time as a kid camping with my family, and was familiar with the phrase take nothing but pictures, leave nothing but footprints.
I was familiar with Leave No Trace as a concept, but much of the book’s information was new to me. Soft Paths struck a chord with me immediately, yet I was somewhat intimidated by all there was to learn.
After fifteen years with the program, however, I know that Leave No Trace, most importantly, is an attitude as much as a philosophy. Leave No Trace is not simply about remembering exactly what minimum impact skill you can practice in every outdoor situation—how far you should camp from water, where to pitch your tent, how to build a fire or if you should build one in the first place. Rather, it is first and foremost an ethic. Leave No Trace is about respecting and caring for wildlands, doing one’s part to protect our limited resources and future recreation opportunities. Once this attitude is adopted and the outdoor ethic is sound, the specific skills and techniques become second nature.
Beyond a personal commitment, there are many practices and details to be learned in order to make the best possible decisions when enjoying the outdoors. This new edition of Soft Paths is an excellent resource for both shaping an outdoor ethic and providing these details. The updated text is comprehensive and practical, with new color photos illustrating specific minimum-impact ideas, skills, and techniques that allow people of many different experience levels to learn and understand their personal role in protecting wildlands. The text is user-friendly, allowing readers to enjoy the book from start to finish or to skip around from chapter to chapter. You are in good hands: NOLS—as a founding partner and ongoing educational provider of the Leave No Trace Center for Outdoor Ethics—has developed much of the Leave No Trace wilderness curriculum based primarily on the information contained in Soft Paths.
Perhaps the most important information provided here is the explanation why Leave No Trace is so essential today. Many of the skills and techniques are based on research that specifically examines human recreational impacts. Many times people don’t feel as though one small action or behavior can make a difference—positive or negative. I am committed to the idea that, equipped with Leave No Trace skills and techniques, we can drastically reduce our recreational impacts and not only maintain but improve the condition of wild and natural lands, one person at a time.
Settle down with this new edition of Soft Paths, get a sense of the ethic, learn the finer points. Then ask yourself, What would my last outing say about me?
You will never get outside
the same way again.
Dana Watts, Executive Director
Leave No Trace Center for Outdoor Ethics
And what will be the disposition of the landscape? Will it be used, as always, in whatever way we will, or will it one day be accorded some dignity of its own?
—Barry Lopez, Arctic Dreams
About This Edition
When Soft Paths was first written in 1987, it provided practical techniques developed over decades of ecological and social research, to give backcountry recreationists information and tools that help them make better decisions about how to minimize their impact on wilderness. The initial Soft Paths recognized that impacts
(defined here as subtle or obviously deleterious recreation-caused changes) have an ecological effect on the land, water, and wildlife. Additionally, impacts
can be social in nature—affecting other people’s wilderness experience or enjoyment. The goal was to explain what individual recreationists can do to minimize their impacts in the back-country, preventing our wild outdoor places from being loved to death.
Since that first edition, the need to enjoy wilderness and all our public recreational lands without harming them has become ever more profound. Recreational wilderness use and impact continue to grow, making it more imperative than ever to walk on soft paths.
NOLS’ perspectives and experiences are grounded in remote wilderness, as is much of the recreation ecology research conducted by the Forest Service and others. So our examples, techniques, and suggested practices all focus on wild backcountry settings. This book addresses impacts in different wildland environments and impacts associated with broad categories of non-motorized recreation.
That said, many of the practices and considerations detailed here are applicable in other environments and outdoor activities as well. Trampling, litter, waste disposal, fire use, wildlife health, and protecting cultural resources all come into play in areas that are not wilderness but are still threatened by overwhelming recreational impacts. City parks, local recreation areas, car camping spots, and urban greenways will all benefit from the minimum impact principles and techniques in the following chapters. With slight adaptation or extrapolation, Soft Paths remains an excellent reference for day hikes, campground camping, canyoneering, orienteering, or mountain biking. What also is broadly applicable is the ethic espoused by Soft Paths, the need for everyone everywhere to accept personal responsibility to be light on all lands.
About the time that Soft Paths initially appeared, many federal and state land managers had come to realize that public education was key to minimizing human impacts on wildlands. In the 1980s, the United States Forest Service (USFS) led the way with a national wilderness ethics program called Leave No Trace and was investing in research on the impacts of recreation on wilderness. Other public land management agencies had programs devoted to educating people about low-impact camping. By the late 1980s, NOLS was intimately involved with Leave No Trace, helping bring together the four major land management agencies—the U.S. Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management, National Park Service, and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service—with manufacturers, outdoor retailers, user groups, educators, and individuals who share a commitment to maintain and protect our wildlands and natural areas for future enjoyment.
In 1994, the Leave No Trace Center for Outdoor Ethics was spun off as its own nonprofit organization. Today, building on material originally presented in Soft Paths, Leave No Trace has grown into an international program that brings its message to millions of outdoor recreationists. NOLS is a proud partner of Leave No Trace, providing materials, training, and curriculum for educators throughout the world. Today, you may see Leave No Trace messages in magazines, on television, and on the packaging of sporting goods. Readers of Soft Paths will easily recognize close parallels between the practices in this book and those of the Leave No Trace program.
New research has been steadily conducted since the first edition of Soft Paths was published. The results of this work help us prescribe better minimum-impact techniques for wilderness use. Many readers have asked us for expanded discussions of the rationale behind recommended camping practices. We have included this new research and provide more explanation without getting too deep into the technical detail.
Some of the recommended practices have been changed from previous editions on the basis of additional field experience, and we’ve incorporated Leave No Trace principles into the text. Statistics, graphs, and photos have been updated, and the bibliography has been expanded and updated for those who want the latest additional sources of information.
It’s clear that wild-country travelers want to invest in the future of the lands they love to explore. We’re grateful for the interest and enthusiasm that the original Soft Paths and the Leave No Trace program have generated. Acknowledgment of the great value of the earth’s remaining wilderness is growing; so too is the public’s willingness to develop a new relationship with the lands that bring us so much joy.
Rich Brame and David Cole
The land ethic simply enlarges the boundaries of the community to include . . . the land.
—Aldo Leopold
Acknowledgments
No single person can take credit for the practical conservation skills developed in these pages. Rather, these techniques have evolved through constant refinement and improvement during the past forty years, thanks to the efforts of the best outdoor educators in the world. To past and present outdoor instructors, wilderness rangers, and stewards, we gratefully dedicate this book.
We owe special thanks to a growing number of reviewers and writers who have helped make each edition so successful, particularly Molly Absolon and Tom Reed. In this latest edition, John Gookin, Haven Holsapple, and especially Joanne Haines provided thoughtful insight and advice.
The fine drawings of wilderness plants and animals are the work of Denise Casey, a talented Wyoming artist. Thanks also go to the Teton Science School for use of the Murie Collection.
Thank you to the U.S. Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Aldo Leopold Wilderness Research Institute—beginning with the support of Bob Lucas, Project Leader of the Forest Service’s Wilderness Management Research Unit—for supporting David Cole’s participation in this revised edition. David has been involved with Soft Paths from the beginning. His experience, research, and command of the subject material is only equaled by his good cheer and willingness to share ideas and passion about keeping wilderness wild.
We’re grateful to the NOLS Board of Trustees for their determination in keeping the advice and techniques found here in the public eye. Beginning in 1985, then executive director Jim Ratz had the vision and tenacity to forge cooperation between NOLS and the federal land management agencies on the nascent LNT program.
Special thanks to Bruce Hampton for turning reports on low-impact camping into Soft Paths, the first book devoted to the topic. Many of his words remain in this edition.
Finally, we owe lasting thanks to Paul Petzoldt, the founder of NOLS, who first taught us to care for wildlands and then showed us how to teach others.
1
The Case for Minimum Impact
From the Appalachian Mountains in the eastern United States, to the deserts of Baja California, to the high peaks of California’s Sierra Nevada, and to the remote coastlines of Alaska, the story is the same: User impact is spreading faster than land managers can control it. People visit the backcountry because they both value and enjoy it, but in the words of one observer, We are loving our wilderness to death.
The following scenarios are typical:
In the Pacific Northwest, some high lake basins are visited by up to twenty-five thousand people in a snow-free season of less than ten weeks.
Popular campsites in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area of Minnesota have suffered an 80 percent loss of vegetation.
So many hikers have traversed the Old Bridle Path up New Hampshire’s Mount Lafayette that the trail has eroded into a gully four feet deep, prompting trail crews to call it the Old Bridle Trench.
Recreational use of America’s wildlands has exploded in the past fifty years. Since passage of the 1964 Wilderness Act, wilderness recreational users have increased about sixfold. Much of this increase occurred during the 1960s when backpacking first became popular, but use has continued to grow as our country’s population has expanded. Recent studies indicate that the number of Americans who backpack is 2.5 times greater in 2009 than it was in 1982. Day hiking tripled over the same time period. Today there are more than 50 million more day hikers and 14 million more backpackers than there were 25 years ago. Since NOLS first published Soft Paths in 1987, the National Park Service’s backcountry overnights have increased over 18 percent and several iconic parks are setting visitor attendance records. Today our wilderness lands host about 20 million visitor-days per year (a twelve-hour stay by one person). As the number of backcountry visitors grows, our responsibility to the land changes. No longer is it enough to simply pick up litter and extinguish matches. These efforts help, but wilderness is more than just an unspoiled environment. We need to be concerned about two dimensions of recreational impact: damage to the integrity of the land and injury to the wilderness experience of others.
Solution by Default
In his book Basic Rockcraft, Royal Robbins says, A simple equation exists between freedom and numbers: the more people, the less freedom.
Today, this maxim guides many public land managers in their attempt to strike a balance between providing free and unconfined access to back-country recreation, and protecting the wildland environment from these same recreationists.
Managers have implemented a wide variety of actions to minimize impact problems in the backcountry. In more than half of national parks, there are limits on group size and length of stay, and overnight visitors are required to have permits. In addition, approximately 40 percent of parks restricted the total number of people allowed overnight in the backcountry.
Restrictions often appear after the damage is done. DAVID COLE
The lands managed by the Forest Service, the Bureau of Land Management, and the Fish and Wildlife Service have fewer restrictions on their use than national parks, but the trend at all agencies has been toward more regulation. One need not look far for examples. Managers of the Linville Gorge Wilderness in North Carolina allow a maximum of thirty individuals per day to enter the area. In Yellowstone National Park, users must obtain a permit before hiking into the back-country, and campsites are designated. Only seven parties per day are allowed to launch on Idaho’s Middle Fork of the Salmon River.
Sometimes such restrictions are unavoidable. But often they come too late, after the damage is already done. No one who values wilderness wants to see these lands suffer more abuse. Yet is the only solution to tell users how to camp, where to camp, and how long to stay? Many of us, after all, seek the solitude and freedom of wildlands as temporary relief from a restrictive society.
This book’s underlying premise is that most damage to wildlands is the result of lack of education, not malice. In fact, it would be difficult to find a more intelligent, more caring group of individuals than backcountry users; most, no matter what their preferred recreational activity, are anxious to do the right thing. Yet good intentions alone have fallen short.
The Path to a Wildland Ethic
Minimum-impact backcountry use is a hands-on, practical approach to caring about both the land and the people who share its richness. Its success hinges on the willingness of individuals to learn, to think, and then to commit knowledge to action. The resulting techniques are flexible and tempered by judgment and experience. They depend more on attitude