December 2, 2008 by
Harry
I am about to post several wonderful images of Oregon State, USA. A truly beautiful place. But first I have to get something else off my chest:
<rant> Imagine cycling along one of the most beautiful
stretches of coastal nature in the US, maybe even in America. Dunes,
forests, cliffs and rough waves. So nice they declared it a ‘National
Recreation Area’!
I enjoyed the scenery, but got more and more annoyed with the trash
that was on the side of the road. It got so bad that I could not focus
on the nature or even on the traffic, but just on the next piece of
plastic that had been thrown out of a car window, or maybe I should say
truck window?
Besides the ugliness of the trash,
the chemicals that are slowly released into nature (by decomposing and
by getting eaten by animals), it also creates dangerous situations for
cyclists, as many times we have to go around heaps of glass or large
pieces of trash, forcing me onto the car lane (assuming there is a shoulder to begin with).
At one point, at the bottom of a steep hill, I decided to take some photographs.
About one mile later, I had about 75 pictures of discarded trash,
all taken within 45 minutes of uphill cycling (some more were shot
after lunch, one hour later). Please take the following facts in
account:
- I only started shooting after I got really annoyed by all the trash, so there were hundreds pieces more, just before this series.
- All first 75 shots were taken within 45 minutes; this includes
cycling uphill, getting off the bike, releasing the flap of my
handlebar-bag, getting the camera ready, taking a picture and getting
moving again. Mostly I could do only a few pedal strokes before
stopping again.
- Many pieces are missing. Only halfway up I started to shoot
‘doubles’, before, I passed items if I already had shot them. Missed
Doubles (or triples) include red Bull, Coca Cola, Camel cigarettes, all
Beers Of Idiots (see below) and more
- I did not shoot most unrecognizable and/or unbranded pieces of trash, such as random car parts, plastic wrappers of all kinds and sizes, unrecognizable glass items and much, much, much more…
- The road was steep on my side, the side of this trash, so likely a multitude of trash was to be found lower down the slope
- It was busy and there was no good shoulder, so I could not stop for every piece.
- Image #27 is the one in the middle: Scenic Byway… Besides this
sign, there had also been a ‘Adopt-A-Highway sign before I started
shooting.
- I only shot one side of the road.
Here is it: all the glory of Mile 207, Oregon (click image for larger version)
Conclusions:
Not all of the below are scientifically proven or valid, but it
after cycling several thousand kilometers along the US highways, it is
reasonable safe to assume that:
- There are hundreds pieces of trash per mile of US Highway, even though it is in a ‘National Recreation Area’
- Coors & Bud (especially light) are the choice of beer for trash-throwing idiots
- There is just as much ‘healthy’ trash (waters such as Dasani, Aquafina, ArrowHead (with ‘Eco-Shape bottle’!), V8, VitaminWater etc) as there is stuff that was already trash to begin with (KFC, McDonalds, Taco Bell, BurgerKing etc etc)
- Drive-thru coffee creates throw-away empty coffee trash.
- Adopt-a-Highway seems nothing more than a scam where local
businesses get some advertising and never look at ‘their’ road again.
There were some exceptions in the US (especially notably when the
Adopter was a Bikeshop or Eco-market etc), but generally those signs
only seemed to attract trash as the idiots throwing things out of their car, seem to need something to aim for..
I assume that the crazy fools that throw these things out of their
car window (trust me, they are NOT cyclists…) have zero respect for
nature also have no respect for others or even themselves, as they are
messing up their own planet. Is is just education? lack of proper
values taught by their parents? Or just plain stupidity? I really
wonder what goes on in their minds if anything at all.
Some places have a sign that says: ‘$1000 fine for littering’. This
means that if one person was stationed here, he could have raised at
least $80,000 in fines (likely a multitude) on this one mile alone. I
think that will cover his salary? How’s that for job creation?
< / rant>