South_Aussie_Hiker wrote:north-north-west wrote:
How do you think the noise and exhaust from choppers and planes impact on wildlife? How much erosion at the water's edge is caused by floatplane landings? How much impact is caused by all the infrastructure and extra transport requirements for equipment and fuel?
You're kidding, aren't you?
People who walk the Overland track fly on aircraft and drive by car/bus to get there. We aren't talking about floatplane landings, we are talking about scenic flights in the Cradle Mountain/OT area.
No, I'm not.
Allow me to introduce you to a new word: 'cumulative'. To put it another way, the aircraft add to the pollution problem. A walker doesn't use fossil fuels. Aircraft do. Walkers don't make that much noise. Aircraft do. It's easier to limit the impact of walkers - in breadth at least - by building a track and keeping the bulk of them on it. When it comes to the Overland most, in fact, don't want to leave it. But aircraft - especially over the bush - have no such restraints. They can - and has been seen - do go wherever they want.
geoskid wrote:north-north-west wrote:Ummmm, may I attempt to put a different perspective on the 'elitist' argument?
I'm deaf. I can no longer hear waterfalls or birdsong or the wind in the trees when I go bush. So what gives all you elitist people with good hearing the right to hear these things when so many of us can't? What gives you elitist visually capable people the right to see the views from your cute little air-conditioned chopper when a blind person can't?
May I suggest ....
You can but it's not.
It would perhaps be similar if a hearing person tried to suggest that the only way to experience wilderness was to hear it, or if a sighted person was to suggest that the only way to experience wilderness was to see it.
Similarly with walkers suggesting that the only infrastructure allowed is that which limits their impact.
You see a difference. I don't. Walkers see and (mostly) hear, and smell, and touch. They experience the place in a wide range of ways, and they do so much more slowly and thoroughly. All the airborne do is sit there and look.
If people are going to sit somewhere comfortable and look, they can look at photos and videos just about anywhere. You're not touching or feeling or smelling or hearing (apart from the engine) anything when you're up in the air, you're cut off from everything except the view; it's just an elitist (please excuse my use of your word) I-have-the-money-to-do-this way to tick something off a bucket list.
There are places where it isn't so much of an issue. But if we're promoting this as 'wilderness' how much of a wilderness is there when you have aircraft overhead every hour if not more often?