Hikers visiting the Pallas-Yllästunturi National Park may notice that the area has hardly any rubbish bins. The move is part of an effort to promote litter-free hiking, according to Metsähallitus Outdoor Recreation and Visitor Manager Pekka Sulkava.

Park management removed the bins previously located in rest areas as well as shelters and lodges along the Pallas-Hetta route last winter. The goal is for all bins to be removed by next year.

According to Sulkava, the practice of hiking without leaving litter behind is steadily gaining popularity in Finland.

“Nature centres have also promoted the idea of litter-free hiking and sold plastic bags for carrying litter so that they don’t get scattered in people’s rucksacks. People have been buying the bags and at the moment it seems that the amount of rubbish at the park’s break areas has clearly decreased,” Sulkava said, adding that he has noticed a change in hikers’ attitudes towards littering in the past decades.

Finland’s natural resource management firm Metsähallitus says that the move has been welcomed by parkgoers.

“Litter-free hiking has become the norm, that everything brought gets taken away and that nothing is left here,” Tuuli-Anna Tuohimaa a hiker from the city of Pudasjärvi, near Oulu, told Yle.

“And you don’t really see any rubbish along the trails, seems like it has become a given,” co-hiker Jaakko Matero added.

Park rangers have also been installing more informational signs within parks and transitioning from traditional outdoor restrooms to ones that are more cost-effective to purchase and simpler to upkeep. All toilets have also been made unisex, meaning that they are no longer separated by gender.

“The unisex model means that the toilets get used more evenly, which reduces the need for maintenance and costs,” Sulkava noted, adding that “overall, the feedback has really improved this year.”

The number of visits to Finland’s national parks has levelled off from the record set in 2021. Some 595,000 people visited the Pallas-Yllästunturi National Park in 2022, down from nearly 700,000 in 2021.

  • this_is_router@feddit.de
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    11 months ago

    It’s not about burden, it’s about the ststistical possibility this happens.

    Not stealing a car isn’t s burden either, would you let your car sit on the street unlocked though?

    Good laws/rules should avoid problems instead of hoping everyone would follow them, which never happens anyway.

    That’s why you don’t just outlaw hateful speech and hope for the best but try to instill in young people why hateful speech is bad.

    You need a solution that scales and isn’t depending on good will is all I’m trying to bring across 🤷🏼‍♂️

    • megalodon@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Good culture is not needing to legislate against stupid behaviour. I’ve been to beaches in Europe which are very clean and beaches in Turkey which are full of litter. Both have rubbish bins which are collected regularly. It’s all down to local culture.