Chicago Sun-Times

Attitude about litter is trash

It’s hard to understand why outdoor enthusiast­s don’t pick up their garbage

- DALE BOWMAN dbowman@suntimes.com @Bowmanouts­ide

Imade a routine call to Thad Cook earlier this week to double-check the restart of fishing this winter at Powerton Lake. Then Cook, the site superinten­dent, and I wandered to the impact of trash and littering on public sites.

Powerton, the cooling lake near Pekin, is near the end of a redo of the site from the parking lot to the launch. Cook sounded like a proud father. But he had a worry.

“We’ve had a lot of issues with trash,’’ he said. “It is embarrassi­ng as a human being, quite honestly. We are coming up on signing another lease.’’

Outdoors people acting like pigs is nothing new. I don’t care that it is a tiny fragment of the outdoors people, it impacts us all.

Powerton is not the only leased site where the behavior of miscreants came up in discussion­s with site owners.

Regional fisheries administra­tor Rob Miller mentions nearly every year in my talks with him about Braidwood and Heidecke Lakes that the owners have concerns about anglers moving rocks around in the riprap.

In fact, it is one factor in why more shore areas aren’t open at Heidecke.

The rocks are placed in the riprap to protect the integrity of banks on the perched cooling lakes. They serve a really important purpose. When the rocks are removed to build a hole to sit in or piled up as a rod holder, it leaves a potential weak point in the bank.

That is more than just the unsightlin­ess of littering.

Littering is bad enough.

Earlier this fall, I was doing my morning half-mile ramble with Lady, our family mutt, when I rambled past a blue bait container just dropped by the bank of the town pond. Other than those who feed their odder pets with bait, only anglers use those blue bait containers.

Maybe I was low on sleep, but it so pissed me off that I posted it across social-media platforms. I am irritated by littering of any kind, but I feel a responsibi­lity when it was one of my own kind.

It touched a nerve.

On Twitter Nick Caralis (@Panfishpro LLC) noted, “That’s embarrassi­ng to me as this is a bait container left behind, most likely, by a fisherman. I identify as being a fisherman, though not part of the litter club.’’

The same is true of plastic hook wrappers or crankbait boxes.

On Instagram, Josh Sokol responded, “Whenever I steelhead creek fish, I find all of the community holes full of garbage. I have a box of garbage bags in my truck. Almost every time I go out, I’m picking up trash before or after I fish. Most I’ve picked up in an hour is five full bags worth . . . . I say you are just as guilty walking by a piece of garbage as the person who dropped it there.’’

Many years ago, Ken Schneider told me he would pick up five pieces of garbage every time he went fishing. I stole his idea and used it when going fishing or hiking with our

 ?? DALE BOWMAN/FOR THE SUN-TIMES ?? Pulling rocks out of the riprap or moving rocks to make stands for fishing rods or holes to sit in lessen the integrity of the riprap, which is designed to protect the shorelines of perched cooling lakes such as LaSalle or Heidecke.
DALE BOWMAN/FOR THE SUN-TIMES Pulling rocks out of the riprap or moving rocks to make stands for fishing rods or holes to sit in lessen the integrity of the riprap, which is designed to protect the shorelines of perched cooling lakes such as LaSalle or Heidecke.
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