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17 Replies
- charlesExplorerI was hunting in Allegheny National Forest and saw a Forestry worker throw his lunch trash out the window including a water bottle. I tried to report him but without a license number to no avail so some of the trash pickers are trash themselves.
Nick - Gene_GinnyExplorerFWIW: THere seemed to be plenty of people enjoying Acadia today. I went past many of the entrances to the park and the roads were littered with cars. A few were people stopping to take pictures but many cars were empty. Presumably those were for people hiking the trails. There were several spots on Otter Creek Rd (Rt.3) where I could see people on the trails in the park. At the end of Otter Cliff Rd where it hits the Park Loop Rd I saw several cyclists using the Loop Rd. I even took a picture of one couple using their camera for them while I was taking foliage pictures. I wished them well.
The so called gates are low and easy to bypass on foot.
I have to admit, when I passed a sign "Children at Play" I was thinking of a location far south of Acadia. - Bears_DenExplorerI say the same thing during hurricane season in Fl. I'm one of those who has to go to work when there is a hurricane and respond when some fool gets his/her butt in a ringer instead of heeding the warnings. People just feel it is always them first and the heck with everyone else. I always tell my wife, that should I die or get hurt because of someone else's stupidity to get their name and vital info and hire a good attorney. Yes, it is my job to help those during catastrophes but it isn't my job to fix stupid.
- mikeleblanc413Explorer
Black7beard wrote:
lizzie wrote:
We have a lot of "civil disobedience" here in the National Forests in the mountains.
That's not civil disobedience, that's just trash being trash. I have no doubt the same people who trash public lands are the same ones who dump their ash trays in parking lots, dump oil, litter and steal anything they get the chance to. If you go to their home I'm sure you'll find the same thing they leave at parks, trash and garbage strewn about. Make any excuse you want, but human trash is human trash.
Make any excuse you want, but human trash is human trash ABSOLUTELY!!! - CroweExplorerHuge teaching moment possible for kids using someone like Rosa Parks as an example-peaceful rebellion. It also teaches them that if they do something wrong and get caught they will have to pay the price. You can delineate what's "civil disobedience" versus a destructive crime. Again, not advocating or discouraging, just sayin'.
- brokeboaterExplorer
lizzie wrote:
We have a lot of "civil disobedience" here in the National Forests in the mountains.
That's not civil disobedience, that's just trash being trash. I have no doubt the same people who trash public lands are the same ones who dump their ash trays in parking lots, dump oil, litter and steal anything they get the chance to. If you go to their home I'm sure you'll find the same thing they leave at parks, trash and garbage strewn about. Make any excuse you want, but human trash is human trash. - monkey44Nomad II
Crowe wrote:
No skin off my nose one way or the other. If you intentionally break the rules for good or bad reasons, then accept the penalty with a smile on your face. No whining.
Agree. However, I do agree that it's OUR property as we pay the taxes that support the parks, but it's a matter of semantics.
I believe, and defended my right to say it plenty of years ago, the parks belong to the people of the USA. And the 'rules' that close them don't mean anything to me because I also believe the rules are not legal. BUT, the gates make it impossible to enter the parks.
We're heading down H-395 in CA - there are plenty of parks here, but no state parks. We therefore, had to stay in hotels and are 3000 miles from home. We have full intentions of sending the bills for these hotels to our representative, so he can pay for the difference between the $8 camping fee, and the $150 hotel fee for eight days. Yes, I know, won't pay it, probably, but it will make a statement. - CroweExplorerNo skin off my nose one way or the other. If you intentionally break the rules for good or bad reasons, then accept the penalty with a smile on your face. No whining.
Agree. However, I do agree that it's OUR property as we pay the taxes that support the parks, but it's a matter of semantics. - Jim_ShoeExplorerNo skin off my nose one way or the other. If you intentionally break the rules for good or bad reasons, then accept the penalty with a smile on your face. No whining.
- AlabamaTravelerExplorerI saw a picture today of a German family visiting the USA stepping over the gate to Eagle Lake in Acadia to have a picnic at the lake. They were among many "visiting" different parts of Acadia.
Good for them. This is exactly what "we the people" should be doing nation wide. Let's take back our country.
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