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Gritty Take: Take Out The Trash

Gritty Take is an occasional feature on Riding Gravel where we allow editorial takes on issues and subjects related to gravel riding. The opinions stated are those of the author and may not necessarily reflect those of RidingGravel.com, its advertisers, or staff.

Gritty Take: Take Out The Trash- by Guitar Ted

I remember the ride well. I was in the Flint Hills near Emporia, Kansas, home to the Dirty Kanza 200, and the event was happening as I was out on my own ride. I was there with a good friend, who was riding the 200 that day. Since I wasn’t registered to ride, I took a route North of the city since the event was almost entirely South of Emporia. The ride was beautiful, spectacular, fun, and the remoteness of the area was awash with the peace and serenity that only a rural area ride can bring. To say I had been enjoying the ride would be a massive understatement.

The beauty of gravel riding should not be lessened by our trash. There is no place for that out here. Image of the Flint Hills of Kansas

Then I saw it……

Maybe it was because I had been so immersed in the alluring beauty of the Flint Hills that I had been made hyper-sensitive, or maybe it was just good sense coming to the fore, but the sight of that wadded up gel packet made me disgusted. To think that someone like me, a cyclist, someone maybe enjoying the Flint Hills, as I was, had trashed the road with this easily packed out nutrition container was unthinkable to me. I picked up the dusty container and finished out my ride.

The trash I found wasn’t on the route of the DK200, but had I been on that route, I undoubtedly would have seen a lot more of this garbage. It is one of the reasons why the Dirty Kanza Promotions team has had a “Kleen Kanza” ride a week or so after the DK200 for the last several years. Now they do a lot more trash picking up from other sources as well, but make no mistake, we gravel grinders are becoming a filthy bunch, and I think it needs to come to a screeching halt.

It is happening all over. I saw it at Gravel Worlds, I have seen it at the former Trans Iowa event. Gravel grinders too busy chasing the front or those who are thoughtless, (or perhaps both) are throwing out empty nutritional packets, tubes, and more along once pristine routes, sullying not only someone else’s backyards, but our reputations as cyclists in their wake. I don’t know about you, but I would rather not be associated with careless trash-tossing cyclists who have no regard for nature or thoughts for other folks who live where they are riding. It’s inexcusable behavior.

Event promoters should be making this a priority and enforcing better behavior from their riders. Maybe more events should consider “Kleen Kanza” type post-event clean up rides to promote goodwill in their respective event’s riding areas. Whatever the case, the bottom line is that we have to be better citizens and stewards of these places we have the privilege to ride in. Trashing the roads with our refuse is not what I want gravel riders to be known for, and I think that resonates with many of the readers of RidingGravel.com as well. Let’s be a force for change. Let’s take out the trash from our rides. 

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