Combating the Litter of Late Summer

August 19, 2024 greg wagner

Litter. Trash. Garbage. Whatever you want to call it, there is a large amount and variety of it unfortunately in the outdoor world. Plastic bottles. Plastic grocery bags. Fishing bait containers. Spent fishing line. Cigarette butts. Banana peels. Food wrappers. Diapers. Broken lawn chairs. Old tires. Sheez! The list of trash items seems endless. And it seems to pile up or be more apparent this time of year, especially with the wind tossing some of it around.

Trash is piled up next to a fire ring at a Nebraska state recreation area before being picked up and properly recycled and disposed of by Game and Parks staff. Photo courtesy of Parks Division/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission

Many people throughout the spring and summer have been visiting outdoor places and spaces. Float trip outfitters report a lot of bookings on rivers. It seems that a fair number of folks are enjoying outdoor recreational and natural resources, and that’s great! However, along with the high traffic has come high amounts of trash.

An empty bait container and plastic water bottle are left along a beach by someone on a private sandpit lake in Dodge County, NE. Littering is not just a problem on public lands. Photo by Greg Wagner/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.

Oh, the garbage.

A bulging trash bag set outside of a west Omaha business. Illegal litterers have no boundaries. Photo by Greg Wagner/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.

Just think if we can inform all these people utilizing the great outdoors how they can treat land and water more responsibly, there may be less trash, or no trash at all!

We also need to examine our behavior, too, don’t we? Hmmm …

Jerry Kane, Public Information Officer for the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission and an avid angler, thought to himself how he could help with the trash problem when fishing at public lakes and ponds. He said, “Greg, when the fishing is slow, I pick up garbage along the shoreline with a trash bag I carry in my vehicle and then properly dispose of it or recycle it.”

“You might share that idea with other anglers,” he added.

Excellent idea, Jerr.

Cristopher Bueno, a college student, takes it upon himself to gather pieces of trash thrown out on a private sandpit lake beach in Dodge County, NE. Photo by Greg Wagner/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.

It is my view that we should leave public outdoor spaces and areas even better than we found them initially. Yes, that means picking up and properly disposing or recycling the trash of yourselves and others! It would be the absolute best example we could set.

At the Fremont Lakes State Recreation Area near Ames, NE an individual prepares to put trash voluntarily collected from one of the beaches on the area in a dumpster. Photo courtesy of Bill Booth/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.

Beyond that, I am all for changing attitudes (even our own) and actively recruiting folks (like you and your family) in individual cleanup efforts as well as organized cleanup efforts such as our Game and Parks Kayak Cleanup Nights or adopting a stretch of public roadway for cleanup, naturally.

What’s needed for picking up discarded items? Not much really. Trash grabber tools and puncture resistant gloves along with heavy duty garbage and recycling bags are the safest to use. At a minimum, rubber gloves and separate bags for trash and materials to be recycled should be used. Before we start the movement though, we need to understand trash, those who litter and why they litter and what we can do about the present pollution problem.

We all pretty much know that littering, defined as the improper disposal of waste products that can cause many problems, is a bad thing to do and there are fines and court costs associated with getting caught throwing things out. We learned that when we were young and are reminded of that now by signage at frequent illegal dumping spots.

Of course, litter (I prefer the word trash) is unsightly and costly. Nevertheless, it goes further than that, much further.

There are negatives to living things.

Human Health Implications

Litter can be very hazardous to people. Think about it. Motorists can get into vehicle accidents trying to avoid it. People can also cut themselves on litter.

Littering can lead to the spread of illnesses such as diarrhea. Littering can be composed of flammable materials or flammable containers with residue that could immediately ignite a fire.

Discarded plastic items in water sources can affect water quality, making it unsafe for us to use.

Impact on Nature

What impact does trash have in nature? Well, it creates toxins that are absorbed by the soil, harming, if not killing plants. Trash directly affects wildlife when they ingest and try to digest human-made materials such as plastic, polystyrene foam (Styrofoam) and aluminum. Shore birds and fish, for example, may consume broken particles of Styrofoam believing they are food sources. Death is usually imminent.

Trash items tossed into a lake or pond may even lead to algal blooms and a reduction of oxygen needed for aquatic life.

There are other littered threats to wildlife. These are along our shorelines. They are discarded fishing lines, hooks, weights, plastic sacks and more.

A plastic sack is spotted and photographed in the water along the shore of a private sandpit lake in Dodge County, NE. Photo by Greg Wagner/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.
I grab the plastic sack from the water of the lake to be recycled. Photo by Greg Wagner/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.

Entanglement is typically the result with many of these discarded items causing severe injury or death to an animal. Monofilament fishing line can take up to 600 years to break down in the environment, according to scientific analysis! A superb option exists near the water at many publicly accessible waters in Nebraska where anglers can put spent fishing line in specialized bins to be recycled, thanks to the Nebraska Fish and Game Association. Look for them along a water near you!

Daryl Bauer of the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission’s Fisheries Division poses with a fishing line recycling bin donated in his dad’s memory through the Nebraska Fish and Game Association at Merritt Reservoir’s Cedar Bay boat ramp near Valentine, NE. Photo courtesy of Daryl Bauer/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.

Organic Trash

Then, there is what I call “organic trash.” Do you know what comprises organic trash? The answer: Fruits and vegetables. More specifically, your banana, orange and lemon peels and apple cores.

It may be hard to imagine that throwing your banana peel or apple core on the ground at a state park or wildlife management area could be hazardous to wildlife because you think it will simply decompose. That is untrue.

Did you know research shows that an apple core can take two months to decompose? The decomposition of a banana, orange or lemon peel can take up to two years. Within those time frames, the leftover part of those fruits are trash!

Interestingly, what we humans consider healthy for us is not healthy for wildlife. Studies indicate that wild animals typically do not eat stuff like banana, orange and lemon peels or apple cores. If they do eat those kinds of things, it is not part of their normal diet and can hurt them.

Biologists say when certain wildlife species eat human foods, enzymes in their bodies change to adapt to them. When the animal returns to a natural diet, it often cannot digest it.

Movie Theater Syndrome

Let me address the “Movie Theater Syndrome.” Have you heard of it?

This is the mentality of being in a movie theater and leaving your soda cups, candy wrappers and popcorn containers on the floor or in the drink holders or seats and walking out when the movie is finished. After all, somebody else will pick up my trash. Somebody is getting a paycheck to do that, aren’t’ they? Hmmm …

The Movie Theater Syndrome is applicable to the outdoors as well. People view an outdoor destination as a place to go for a particular outdoor activity such as fishing, swimming, boating, picnicking, etc. and not caring about leaving trash because they have already seen some trash strewn around.

There is absolutely no value or personal ownership placed on that public outdoor space that they have the privilege of paying to use. After all, somebody else will pick my trash. Somebody is getting a paycheck to do that, aren’t they? Hmmm …

Research proves we take our cues about what to do in a particular setting by what people have already done there. The perception is that littering is an acceptable practice when encountered. They figure it is somebody else’s job to pick it up. What a dang shame!

Before being picked up and properly disposed of in a garbage can or put in a recycling receptacle by Game and Parks employees, discarded wrappers and other assorted trash items litter the grass near the shoreline on one of Nebraska’s state recreation areas. Photo courtesy of Parks Division/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.

Studies of Litterers

Of those that litter, studies repetitively found there were specific ways people did it.

The first type of litterer is the one who tries to find a place for the disposable object that still leaves the area looking clean. They attempt to tuck the object into cracks or other places where it will not blow away. Still other litterers try to bury the object, but it later reveals its nastiness. In some instances, the distance to the dumpster mattered.

Researchers also discovered those who make the effort to get to a trash bin, but fail to get all the garbage inside. “Foul shooters” miss the can and leave the trash or trash bag on the ground next to a dumpster or trash can.

The studies also summarized some people were “90 percenters,” who properly dispose of large objects, but leave behind less conspicuous, smaller objects.

In addition to the laziness and carelessness of littering, there is the intentional side of it.

This is an anti-establishment act or ‘thumbing of the nose’ at authority or society. “Flagrant flingers” are those who litter in the open without any attempt to conceal their actions.

Gee, do you fall into any of these categories or know people who do? Let us remember most littering is intentional, not accidental.

No matter how a person litters, it still has negative repercussions on us and the environment. Potentially, people think it is okay to litter because they do not see the direct harm in it at the time.

That is sad, but we can we do?

8 Things You Can Do about the Trash Problem

(1) Make sure your trash is secure and placed in proper receptacles that are not overflowing in picnic areas, campgrounds, beaches, boat ramps and other outdoor spaces. Note that plastic bottles and bags, aluminum cans, wrappers, newspapers and other lightweight materials can be easily be scattered by the wind. Trash knows no boundaries!

(2) Leave no trace! Be prepared to pack out all of your trash, especially in state wildlife management areas and national forests. Dispose of waste properly: “Pack it in, Pack it out.” This common slogan is a simple yet effective message to get folks to take their trash home with them. The premise of “Pack it in, pack it out” for outdoor enthusiasts also aims at reducing the volume of trash you actually take with you and have to pack out.

(3) Organize or participate in a clean-up day or program at a park, natural area, river corridor or private sandpit lake development. Join our Game and Parks Kayak Cleanup Nights. They’ve proven to be very successful!

A kayaker, Mary Kay Wolf, collecting trash out of her boat, including an orange cone. Photo courtesy of Kenneth Pyle.

(4) Educate others about the importance of picking up trash, properly disposing of it and/or reusing or recycling it. For example, replace disposable cups with coffee mugs and reusable water bottles.

(5) Lead by example and leave an area better than you found it when you arrived.

(6) Keep a litter or trash bag in your vehicle and use it!

(7) Consider upcycling. It is a creative reuse/repurpose process of transforming or reinventing an otherwise disposable item into something of higher quality. You could fashion a produce bag into a beach tote, as an example.

(8) Incorporate more sustainability practices at home – Grow your own vegetable garden, compost certain food scraps, etc.

An eggplant is ripe for the picking in the small Wagner family vegetable garden in Bennington, NE. Having a vegetable garden not only offers fresh produce, but it saves money, reduces waste and is a wonderful family-time activity. Photo by Greg Wagner/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.

The post Combating the Litter of Late Summer appeared first on Nebraskaland Magazine.

Previous Article
Rick Holland
Rick Holland

We lost one of our Nebraska fisheries professionals this spring, Dr. Richard Holland. My relationship with ...

Next Article
Not a Bite
Not a Bite

We have all had days like this: If you fish for muskies, you really know how that feels! I only know one so...