Trekking with tiffin boxes
Bring
your own tiffin box
Thanks
are due to the team at The
Hindu EDGE. Of course none of this would have been possible without the
younger ones, colleagues and our trip-partner.
“All of us will take 2 empty
bottles and 2 empty tiffin boxes during the trip”,
- we shared along with details concerning warm clothes, footwear and so on. Bottles
for water were fine but tiffin boxes for food! “What is the need?” said the looks on half of the younger faces!
We
were planning the annual trip for one of our classes at school – this time a
trek in the Garhwal Himalayas – and were keen to do better than what we had
ended up doing during the previous
year, especially on the sustainability front. One sore sight had been
disposal of packing material for food – this included paper, plastic and aluminium
foil. A group of 40 during a 16 hour rail journey itself has the potential to
generate a substantial load of trash.
For
this trip, we used our tiffin boxes and spoons from the beginning. Whether it
was while walking up and down the hills, we had our meals in these tiffin
boxes. It was fun to rinse them together as well in the chill water.
Making friends
We
had full support of our partner, the trek organizers, in this. They provided each
of us with a bag, to be tied at the waist during the treks. We used these bags
to bring the trash we encountered on the route down to the base-camp. One of
the impacts of this activity was that it got few of the younger ones thinking
aloud – why do people need to consume chips and soft-drinks, in these stunning
mountains of all places, and then dump them there? Dry toilets too played their
role, and vividly. They did what treks do. They moved the younger ones beyond
their comfort zones, had them try out a new process – a process put in place
based on concern for the environment, encouraged them to see life beyond their
limited worlds and enabled them to come back richer with experiences.
The
partners’ approach also presented an opportunity to delve deeper on issues that
had escaped us. These included the procedure for using wet-wipes and sanitary
pads during the trek. Wet wipes were simple. They were not to be carried beyond
the base-camp. The sanitary pads however needed to be brought back to the
base-camp. Some of us were not in sync with this. Disagreements are welcome, or rather necessary,
and discussed them at great length. Another window was in the form of
Uttarakhand High Court order that prohibited overnight stays in the meadows (bugyals). This, I understand, we engaged
meaningfully with students on. We discussed the impact people have on the
ecosystem when they go in large groups and disrespect the mountains. Not only
are the numbers of people going for treks rising, but also the sheer disdain they
display for ecology! Both put together are a recipe for disaster as the recent
cleaning expeditions on Everest have pointed out.
Coming
back to the tiffin boxes they had an unplanned but very welcome consequence as
well. The younger ones indulged in an act which, these days, is alien to most
who come from affluent backgrounds. An act as welcome as the out-of-the-season
snow-fall we encountered during the trek. They shared meals.
One of the camp-sites
Wah.
ReplyDeleteThanks ~
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