So I get up this morning and figured I would watch a video or two on Youtube before I started my day. I ran across a video with "Overland Bound" in the title and thought that would be a great video to watch. By the time I got a quarter of the way through the video I was so disgusted I had to force myself to finish watching it. I will be polite and not call people out but they either don't understand what "Leave No Trace" or "Tread Lightly" is, or don't care to follow it. The video showed a number of people driving in wet lands (and getting massively stuck) and blazing new trails. I was really surprised to see a number of vehicles parked in a lake just to get a cool picture (I am giving them the benefit of doubt that they were not washing the mud off their vehicles in the lake).
Most of the off-road organizations I have been involved in preach Tread Lightly because they don't want to risk losing access to public lands (which this video was taken on). I have always had a problem with these organizations because their understanding of these principles only seem to go as far as "don't screw it up for everyone" but in general don't seem to care about the principles.
I have always seen Overlanders as being different. Overlanders embrace the principles of Leave No Trace and Treadly Lightly because it is nature itself that is the attraction. I heard repeatedly to air down so you don't leave holes on the trail from spinning or create corrigation on the trail. Or there is the more widely discussed "Pack it in - Pack it out" as well as leave it better than you found it. I've always seen Overlanding as having a higher standard of conduct than off-roaders primarily because their purpose is appreciation of the land they are on. Has Overlanding gotten so popular that their standard of conduct has dropped, or are we getting people involved in the Overland community that just don't get what Overlanding is about?
I think the biggest principle the people in the video missed is "Leave it as you found it". To me what they did was no better than the kid who scribes his name in the middle of the 2,000 year old rock painting.
Most of the off-road organizations I have been involved in preach Tread Lightly because they don't want to risk losing access to public lands (which this video was taken on). I have always had a problem with these organizations because their understanding of these principles only seem to go as far as "don't screw it up for everyone" but in general don't seem to care about the principles.
I have always seen Overlanders as being different. Overlanders embrace the principles of Leave No Trace and Treadly Lightly because it is nature itself that is the attraction. I heard repeatedly to air down so you don't leave holes on the trail from spinning or create corrigation on the trail. Or there is the more widely discussed "Pack it in - Pack it out" as well as leave it better than you found it. I've always seen Overlanding as having a higher standard of conduct than off-roaders primarily because their purpose is appreciation of the land they are on. Has Overlanding gotten so popular that their standard of conduct has dropped, or are we getting people involved in the Overland community that just don't get what Overlanding is about?
I think the biggest principle the people in the video missed is "Leave it as you found it". To me what they did was no better than the kid who scribes his name in the middle of the 2,000 year old rock painting.