Green Climbing
Posted: Thu Feb 11, 2010 1:44 pm
The new edition of Climbing magazine is devoted to 'green" or "greener" climbing....what do you do to sustain the planet and the sport?
For me, I actually was torn and felt more guilty after reading the mag cover to cover. Over and over it hit me that our sport is not healthy for the planet in any stretch of the definition. Every article talks about minimizing our impact, not eliminating or improving.
Driving our cars (wasting fossil fuels) to the crag and taking road trips seems to be the biggest impact we as climbers have. But how in the world do we eliminate this? The list in the mag was long and overwhelming...dogs destroying vegetation, human erosion with trails, fixed anchors permanently scarring the rock, the by products (many oil related) that are part of gear manufacturing, the noise pollution from screaming climbers/boulderers, killing vegetation when we drop our packs or boulder pads under the new areas, .......
I always wanted to think/feel like I was engaging in a healthy lifestyle for Mother earth and for my brothers and sisters who I walk this path alongside. But now I am doubting, and think it is all an illusion to satisfy my thirst for adventure.
Is there anyone here who honestly can say with a straight face they are eco conscious, yet they climb outside regularly? If so, please share your stories of how your journey is helping and not hurting the environment.
For me, I actually was torn and felt more guilty after reading the mag cover to cover. Over and over it hit me that our sport is not healthy for the planet in any stretch of the definition. Every article talks about minimizing our impact, not eliminating or improving.
Driving our cars (wasting fossil fuels) to the crag and taking road trips seems to be the biggest impact we as climbers have. But how in the world do we eliminate this? The list in the mag was long and overwhelming...dogs destroying vegetation, human erosion with trails, fixed anchors permanently scarring the rock, the by products (many oil related) that are part of gear manufacturing, the noise pollution from screaming climbers/boulderers, killing vegetation when we drop our packs or boulder pads under the new areas, .......
I always wanted to think/feel like I was engaging in a healthy lifestyle for Mother earth and for my brothers and sisters who I walk this path alongside. But now I am doubting, and think it is all an illusion to satisfy my thirst for adventure.
Is there anyone here who honestly can say with a straight face they are eco conscious, yet they climb outside regularly? If so, please share your stories of how your journey is helping and not hurting the environment.