I realize the apparent hypocrisy of saying that but we've seen a growing problem in two intertwined areas over the last several years. The biggest one is the trampling and trashing of popular sites. So few people seem to follow the 'take out what you bring in' mentality. Instead we see plastic bottles and wrappers strewn about. In Canada I saw people willfully disregard "Rehabilitation in progress" signs to trample new growth, permafrost etc. In Peru you can no longer walk among the salt flats because idiot visitors were contaminating them. They've even had to hire a small army of guards at the sites to prevent people from climbing, marking up or throwing the stones of their ruins (and we heard many a ranger whistle to stop people from being idiots). We were looking into a Patagonia trip and it turns out the camping along the W trail is now severely restricted because too many morons were destroying the landscape. So many more people are traveling which means a lot more people who just don't give a shit and have to get specific shots for social media
Which brings me to the second problem: social media whores. Everyone has to have the perfect instagram post to show how awesome their life is. If that means shoving their selfie stick in someone's face, asking people to move so their 20 minute cell phone photoshoot can pretend they had Maccu Pichu to themselves, or climbing over barriers to destroy the landscape so they can get their 'perfect' photo. After a 1.5 hour hike in Canada I saw two women change outfits (removing water proof windbreakers, mittens and hats to temporarily change into warmer weather clothing) do their nails, hair and makeup so they could post their photos on instagram. They faked how nice the weather so they could wow people with how ideal their trek was. Oh, did you want to get past? Sorry, everyone in this 25 person group has to have a 5 minute photoshoot that makes it look like they're the only ones there. "Do not walk" signs? Please - that would get in the way of our selfie! Ima just trample these small plants instead.
I'm not sure if its the easiest way to fix the issue but I think Peru is on to something. They limit the number of people to certain sites and they staff a large number of rangers to keep the morons more in line. Honestly I'd like to see a lot of very heavy fining of people for littering and trespassing. It's getting a bit depressing to see the increase of willful destruction over the last several years. Sadly I don't think much action will be forthcoming because of concerns it might impact the growth of local economies.
Which brings me to the second problem: social media whores. Everyone has to have the perfect instagram post to show how awesome their life is. If that means shoving their selfie stick in someone's face, asking people to move so their 20 minute cell phone photoshoot can pretend they had Maccu Pichu to themselves, or climbing over barriers to destroy the landscape so they can get their 'perfect' photo. After a 1.5 hour hike in Canada I saw two women change outfits (removing water proof windbreakers, mittens and hats to temporarily change into warmer weather clothing) do their nails, hair and makeup so they could post their photos on instagram. They faked how nice the weather so they could wow people with how ideal their trek was. Oh, did you want to get past? Sorry, everyone in this 25 person group has to have a 5 minute photoshoot that makes it look like they're the only ones there. "Do not walk" signs? Please - that would get in the way of our selfie! Ima just trample these small plants instead.
I'm not sure if its the easiest way to fix the issue but I think Peru is on to something. They limit the number of people to certain sites and they staff a large number of rangers to keep the morons more in line. Honestly I'd like to see a lot of very heavy fining of people for littering and trespassing. It's getting a bit depressing to see the increase of willful destruction over the last several years. Sadly I don't think much action will be forthcoming because of concerns it might impact the growth of local economies.