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I see them every single day: Neatly-knotted plastic bags of all colors, sometimes discreetly tucked by a trailside boulder, atop a marker post, or, in the most egregious cases, right in the middle of the trail. On my local trails and in the backcountry, abandoned dog poop bags can seem more common than unscooped poop. This needs to end.
If you hike with your dog, perhaps youve been tempted to ditch their doodoo, telling yourself youll circle back for it later. Sure, Ive been tantalizedlike when my dog has a particularly stinky elimination at the least convenient part of a hike (on our neighborhood jaunts, she likes to time it for after weve passed the dumpster but before weve actually gotten to the trail, maximizing the time Ill have to carry it). But even when it means toting a putrid package for miles on end, I pack out the dog poop. Because not only is it likely Ill forget to pick up my trash on the hike out, but also because other hikers shouldnt be subject to staring at my garbage, even if its only there for an hour.
In my opinion, leaving a bagged turd on the side of the trail is even worse than not picking it up in the first place. Plastic bags are more visually intrusive than naked droppings, which tend to blend in with the ground. (Mind you, Im not condoning this sort of neglect either. And forget the other animals poop outside! nonsensedeer and coyotes are native, your pup isnt.) As a community, hikers have largely gotten over the litter hurdle. You wouldnt drop your crushed beer can or candy wrapper on the ground. Why are doggy bags any different?
(Photo: Olga Rolenko / Moment via Getty Images)Ill just pick it up later, you may say. Whats the harm in that? Temporarily littering is still littering, and your actions signal to others that its OK to do so. The cumulative effect of multiple poop bags degrade the hiking experience for your fellow trail users. And lets say you do forget to circle back for that bundle. Itll take much longer to decompose than unbagged excrement (which is still bad). Perhaps you justify the act by telling yourself that at least someone wont step in bagged waste, but a spoiled view is just as unpleasant as a dirtied boot sole.
Backpackers pride themselves on going days without a shower, sleeping in the dirt, drinking river water, and doing our human business in the woods. So why do we have such a problem carrying some dog poop? In a sealed plastic bag? If properly picked up, carrying your dogs poop for a few miles poses no health riskand if you stow it properly, should cause little to no noticeable odor. From licking salsa off a shelter floor to comparing blisters, Ive seen hikers unflinchingly do much grosser things.
I get it: it can be plain inconvenient to carry out a bag of poop, especially on hikes where you need to keep your hands free. Ive had to get creative, lashing poop bags to my bike handlebars or carabinering them to the outside of my pack. Hikers are inventive. If you can jerry-rig a broken tent pole or treat a sprained ankle, surely you can find a way to transport a bag of poo with you until it can be disposed of.
(Photo: Chris McLoughlin / Moment via Getty Images)If you follow the first principle of Leave No Trace (plan ahead and prepare), you wont need to enlist that creativity. Poop is inevitable, and every dog owner should have a plan to dispose of it before bringing their pooch along for a hike. No excuses.
If carrying those extra few ounces by hand or shoving it in next to your first aid kit is too much for you, Ill offer some solutions: Designate a fanny pack or a pocket of your pack as the poop compartment. Bagged poop shouldnt leak, but if you still get the ickies, line that pocket with a trash bag or a dedicated, lightweight dry bag. If you really want to go hard on odor blocking, carry an empty coffee bag or some powdered bleach, which also work great for packing out your own waste.
Even better? Get your pooch a backpack. If you dont want to carry out your dogs excrement, make them do it! Your pup wont mind the smells, and can also carry their own water and treats.
If you still feel tempted to ditch that plastic bag trailside? Its time to find a dogsitter, and hit the trail by yourself instead.
From
Picture this: one thousand football fields lined up in a row, each one filled with dog poop one foot deep. Its not a pleasant thought, but thats how much waste our canine pets create each year in the U.S.
What happens to all that crap? That depends on what we do with it.
Youre not gonna like what Im about to tell you. Once I started to dig into how to handle my dogs poop in the most responsible, environmentally-friendly way, I didnt like it either.
If youre like me, you dutifully scoop your dogs poop with a biodegradable or compostable bag that you paid good money for. We feel good about buying those bags because we think theyre better for the planet. Newsflash: theyre not. Weve been had.
I couldnt find any data on how big the dog poop bag business is, but if you search Amazon for that term you get over a thousand hits. Start clicking and youll see lots of language (USDA certified, certified compostable, biodegradable, made from vegetables) designed to make you think that those bags will melt away and sprout daisies when they hit the landfill.
Problem is, all those certifications are based on commercial composting facilities which engineer the perfect conditions needed for the bags to break down. Those conditions do not exist in the landfill, so the bags simply dont break down as claimed. Instead, they get buried beneath other garbage and fester, all the while releasing greenhouse gasses into the atmosphere. Lots and lots of greenhouse gasses.
Related articles:If you are looking for more details, kindly visit biobag dog poop bags.
So whats a responsible dog owner to do? To find out, I reached out to Rose Seemann, author of The Pet Poo Pocket Guide. Seemann is a co-founder of Enviro Pet Waste Network, a nonprofit whose goal is to connect and educate people on sustainably managing pet waste. We talked about all the different ways dog owners deal with their crap and came up with some good, better, and best options.
Nobody wants to seeor worsestep in your dogs daily offering. At the very least, pick it up and throw it away. Some cities will even fine you for not doing so. But the big question is what to pick it up with? There are two basic choices: paper or plastic.
(Photo: Kristin Hostetter)I ordered up PoopShark Poop Bags and Pooch Paper. The former is a three-sided bag; the latter is a simple square sheet that you twist shut.
After using these bags for a couple of weeks on woodsy and residential walks that often last an hour or more, I encountered a big drawback: the paper is thin, uncoated, and not designed to encapsulate a wet turd for more than 15 or 20 minutes. After that, things get start to get a little sketchy. I found I had to carry a backup plastic bag, which defeats the purpose of choosing a paper scooper.
Representatives from both companies conceded that their best markets are in urban areas, where dog walkers have easy, frequent access to bins, so minimal toting is necessary. I do believe that for city dwellers and short-haul dog walkers, these two products are good optionsfar better than plastic onesbut I wish that both companies were clear in their marketing about the limitations.
(Photo: Kristin Hostetter)If your end game is to trash your bag of poop, then use either a repurposed plastic bagbread, carrot, newspaper, or deli bags all do the trickor buy bags made from 100 percent post-consumer recycled materials as a way to support recycling infrastructure. I found only one product that fits this bill, Purple Poop Bags. (Be warned, they only sell in batches of 6,000, so youll want to go in on it with dog park buddies.) And, as I said: Do not waste your money on anything marketed biodegradable or bio-based. Those companies are capitalizing on our desire to do something good for the planet and not properly educating us on the real-world breakdown of their products. I see it as just plain greenwashing.
If composting programs accepted pet waste, it might be a different story. Then those bags would have a logical place to go. But for now, its just too hard to find a composting facility that allows pet waste. Rose Seemann of Enviro Pet Waste Network only knows of two municipal composting facilities (in Nantucket, Massachusetts, and Brattleboro, Vermont) and a smattering of small-scale composting projects in city parks, dog runs, and trailheads in the U.S. that welcome pet waste into their composting facilities. (Canada is way ahead of the U.S. on this front.)
If you have a yard and your dog does most of his business there, making a poop digester is a great solution. Its a mini septic system designed to send his crap down into the soil, where it will eventually break down and enrich it. Site location here is key. You dont want to build your digester near any waterway or too close to buildings with foundations which could impede drainage.
Its a fairly simple DIY project that entails drilling holes and removing the bottom of a sealable container (like a 5-gallon bucket or old garbage can), lining it with stones, and burying it. Poop goes in along with grass clippings or leaves and a sprinkling of septic treatment which helps things break down faster. Seemann says that septic processing slows down when temps drop below 40 degrees F: Be sure your bin is big enough to get through the cold spells or have a backup plan.
Upcyclingor compostingdog poop into a resource for the garden is, by far, the greenest way to go. If you arent lucky enough to live near a facility that can compost your dogs doo, Seemann recommends you start advocating for one. Building awareness and collective action around dog waste composting is the heart and soul of her work. In her hometown of Boulder, Colorado, the community spoke up about needing better pet waste disposal options, and the city council took action by funding collection points and at popular trailheads and dog parks and transportation of waste to local compost facilities that agreed to process it.
Nobody wants to seeor worsestep in your dogs daily offering. (Photo: Wavetop/iStock/Getty)If you dont think big, youll never get there, says Seemann. She suggests getting a group of like-minded dog park friends together and attending city council meetings. Get the issue on the agenda and show up in force to tell the council you want a composting solution for pet waste. You need to form a vocal, dedicated coalition and make your case.
In the meantime, you can compost your dog waste at home. While that notion is sure to make some of us (read: me) squeamish, its entirely doable and apparently not that difficult. Just know this: even bags labeled home compostable will take several years, maybe more, to break down in your bin.
Virtually everything you read on the internet says that dog waste should not be co-composted with food waste and that any dog waste compost should not be used in any garden beds that contain edibles.
But even that is up for debate. I reached out to Rick Carr, farm director and master composter at Rodale Institute to get his take. He says that most of what you read about the dangers of composting dog poop with food waste is bunk. As long as you manage your pile properly, you can compost anything: meats, dairy, fats, oils. Even dead animals, and yes, any kind of manure.
One key, he says, is to make sure that no food (or poop) is ever showing. It should be nested in browns or carbon material like leaves or straw to enhance the decomposition and eliminate harmful fecal coliforms (like E. coli) over time. Id be more concerned about the risk of exposure to fecal coliforms by getting poop on my shoes and tracking it into my house than putting it in my compost. Fully cooked, cured, finished compost poses virtually no risk, no matter what went into it.
If youre on a hike deep in the woods and your dog poops, think Leave No Trace. Dont just flick it into the woods, says Seemann. (Damn, thats what I always do.) The excess nitrogen and phosphates in domestic dog waste throw the local ecosystem out of whack. And accumulated dog poop in sensitive natural landscapes can encourage the growth of invasive species that crowd out native plants. Then theres the potential problem with run-off into waterways. If you dont plan on packing it out, bury it six inches deep away from water and trails, and let nature do the rest.
Doing right by the planet can make you happier, healthier, andyeswealthier. Outsides head of sustainability, Kristin Hostetter, explores small lifestyle tweaks that can make a big impact. Write to her at .
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