Abusing the Australian Landscape

Darren Stones
Author: Darren Stones
Word Count: 158
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By Darren Stones

As we were driving along the Barrier Highway from Nyngan to Cobar, I was perturbed to see mile after mile of discarded beer bottles by the roadside.

I didn’t stop to photograph the bottles – I didn’t want to. I didn’t want to portray Australia in this way, so the motivation to stop the car was nil.

However, while driving along, I quietly pondered the motivation of the people who did toss their empties out the window.

To me, the Australian landscape is beautiful. When I see such wanton littering, I feel the people who have littered are in a sense abusing the land and its people. It’s a spiritual feeling because the landscape is a part of us all.

Without the land we are nothing. It’s the land we must respect and we must do it as one. It’s our home that’s girt by sea – the lucky country.

Abusing the Australian Landscape

This writing has been published on the Cobar Age and the Nyngan Observer web site. It was also published in The Cobar Weekly.

Abusing the Australian Landscape belongs to the following groups:

Australian Landmarks and Icons, Gaia - The Living Planet, Kairos - Capturing the Decisive Moment, Outback Australia, Street Photography and Photojournalism and Writers' Market
  • Lindsay Knowles

    Lindsay Knowles, 4 months ago

    This is something Robbie and I noticed as well and made a comment. What is wrong with people. It is without a doubt the worse road I have seen for rubbish.

  • Lois Romer

    Lois Romer, 4 months ago

    i have never been on that road, but i just took my dog for a walk in my neighbourhood and found three stubbies tossed onto the naturestrip. how hard is it to find a bin.

  • JeffStockton

    JeffStockton, 4 months ago

    I reckon it is everywhere Darren as i noticed on a recent shoot, walking down Victoria Pass in the Blue Mountains of N.S.W. I must have walked near 2 KM’s & seen 20-30 stubbies along with
    other assorted rubbish,it really is a disgrace.Put it on the floor of your car till you come across a
    garbo

  • ShaneBooth

    ShaneBooth, 4 months ago

    Yes it amazes me that people can take so much stuff into the bush, but cannot take in home again. Makes me sick.

  • Tony Fallon

    Tony Fallon, 4 months ago

    Blimey people are pretty damm thoughtless and dumb sometimes. What you wont see so much of too is the plastic stuff that gets blown into the bush and causes untold damage to wildlife. Some of the papers in the UK have been running pages of pictures of this sort of damage worldwide from land to river to ocean. Its not a pretty sight :(

  • Gregory John O'Flaherty

    Gregory John O..., 4 months ago

    Empty beer bottles are nothing compared to the destruction of Port Phillip Bay, that has been authorised by the government. Count the rest

  • jack01

    jack01, 4 months ago

    You take it in you take it out . thats how it should be ..

  • Chanel2

    Chanel2, 4 months ago

    Couldn’t agree more Darren, how people can just throw their rubbish into such a beautiful environment and have no guilt about it…....just blows my mind.

  • Mark Ingram

    Mark Ingram, 3 months ago

    Hi Darren
    I just picked up a copy of the Cobar Weekly (a weekly newspaper) and found this article published on page 8
    Congrats

  • Rebecca Barker

    Rebecca Barker, 3 months ago

    yeah my daughter (10) is a crusader I think when we go to the beach or local park you can bet that she will pick up any rubbish she sees and most of the time the bin is not that far or she will hold it till she does find one I only hope everyone can encourage this in ourselves and our chilodren and try to get a balance and hope that the litterers wake up and take responsibility for themselves!!!!!! good work putting the subject out there!!

  • STRINGER

    STRINGER, 3 months ago

    DONT WORRY ABOUT THE BOTTLES DARREN….
    THE POSSUMS WILL GET EM’
    POSSUMS LOVE EM’

  • Robert Elliott

    Robert Elliott, 2 months ago

    Travelled that road a number of times and am in complete agreement with what you say, but it could win the tidy road award if it was compared to the Stuart Highway up through the heart of the territory. I do a fair bit of bush regeneration work in the Royal National Park and am amazed at the amount of crap you find in the wilderness areas. I used to wonder what the people who dump it were thinking, but have realized they have nothing to think with.

  • Darren Stones

    Darren Stones in reply to Robert Elliott’s comment, 2 months ago

    Thanks for your thoughts, Robert. Heartbreaking, isn’t it? And to think our own people continue to litter in areas where there are few inhabitants. Very ordinary behaviour to say the least.

    Congratulations on your regeneration work.

    Cheers.

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