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Exciting images like this one convey a skewed image of off-roading, just like a photo of Alex Honnold free-soloing El Cap does not paint an accurate picture of most people's time climbing. But it's fun and bright and compelling, so this is what you click on.
Exciting images like this one convey a skewed image of off-roading, just like a photo of Alex Honnold free-soloing El Cap does not paint an accurate picture of most people's time climbing. But it's fun and bright and compelling, so this is what you click on.
Indefinitely Wild

In Defense of Off-Roading

Dirt bikes and 4x4s aren't nearly as bad for the environment as you might think. (Hear me out.)

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Every time we publish an article about a truck, dirt bike, or off-road vehicle, some of our readers protest. Off-roading just doesn鈥檛 square with a lot of people鈥檚 vision of responsible outdoor recreation. I think those people have it wrong. Allow me to explain.

Off-Roaders Don鈥檛 Actually Go Off-Road

Probably the biggest misconception about 鈥渙ff-roading鈥 is that people just go out and drive wherever they please. This simply isn鈥檛 true. Virtually all off-road driving takes place on designated dirt roads, trails, or in special off-highway vehicle (OHV) areas. In fact, 鈥渙ff-highway鈥 (as in off-pavement) is a much more accurate name for the collection of sports that make up off-roading鈥攊t just doesn鈥檛 have the same ring to it.

I spoke with Sam Logan and Molly Chiappetta of , a nonprofit that promotes responsible, ethical off-highway vehicle use in that state. They spend their time visiting OHV trailheads and events and informing trail users of environmentally responsible ways to enjoy their vehicles. They say that staying on-trail is the most important thing off-roaders can do to minimize their impact鈥攁nd that the vast majority of participants are good about doing that. Exact statistics on how many off-roaders leave designated trails are impossible to calculate, but Chiappetta describes them as 鈥渢he one percent who give us all a bad name.鈥

鈥淢any roads or trails have been in place for decades,鈥 Chiapetta says. Some even started as wagon tracks in the 1800s. The soil is compacted and stable, making it able to stand up to the weight of vehicles passing over it. On such routes, off-roaders can safely travel into or through fragile ecosystems without further damaging them, she says.

鈥淚f a hiker starts a devastating fire, the world at large doesn鈥檛 get the idea that hiking is a negative activity,鈥 says Duane Taylor, executive director of the , referring specifically to last year鈥檚 Eagle Creek Fire, which was started when a teenage day hiker threw fireworks into dry brush in Mount Hood National Forest. Yet readers don鈥檛 complain about our hiking coverage.

Just like other forms of outdoor recreation, off-roading is a self-policing community. Flyers like this one are posted at trailheads and OHV parks and distributed to participants. Violations incur fines.
Just like other forms of outdoor recreation, off-roading is a self-policing community. Flyers like this one are posted at trailheads and OHV parks and distributed to participants. Violations incur fines. (Stay the Trail)

The Environmental Footprint Isn鈥檛 as Bad as You Think

So we鈥檝e established that most off-roaders aren鈥檛 tearing up fragile landscapes. But what about the deleterious effects of the fuel the vehicles burn, you might ask?

Sure, I do burn a lot of fuel in my old Land Rover, which averages about 11 miles per gallon when I take it off-road. During a typical camping trip in the Land Rover, I鈥檒l do roughly 100 miles on dirt. According to the calculator on , the off-road portion of that trip (I鈥檓 not including highway miles here, since I assume we all drive somewhere occasionally to pursue our hobbies) nets .08 metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions.

The thing is, I don鈥檛 actually take the Land Rover off-roading all that often. More often, I鈥檒l fly, visiting family, going on work trips, taking vacations, or this year, buying our聽first house with my girlfriend in Montana. To do that, we鈥檝e flown from Los Angeles to Bozeman five times this year, a trip that nets .44 tons of CO2 for each round-trip.

One of the main reasons for that move is to enable us to spend more time outdoors without the need to get on an airplane or log tons of highway miles. We will actually be reducing our carbon footprint substantially by off-roading more and flying less.

Hands down my favorite thing to use the Land Rover for is hunting, which replaces store- or restaurant-bought meat in our diet with a healthier, wild-caught alternative. It also helps reduce our carbon footprint even further: 2.2 pounds of beef creates of carbon pollution. The average American eats every year. If I replace that beef in our diet with elk and venison, it offsets 2,200 miles of off-roading. I will do far less than that this fall by netting far more wild game.

My point here is that it鈥檚 the regular cycle of consumption that accounts for the majority of pollution we create, not any hobby that we鈥檙e only able to enjoy infrequently.

You Go Off-Road, Too

According to the U.S. Forest Service, in using its system of OHV trails to hunt and fish. In fact, 74 percent of people who off-road in our national forests are doing the same at some point in the year. And it鈥檚 not just those activities, which also suffer from inaccurate perceptions: 11.4 percent of people using those OHV trails are going backpacking, 22 percent are going mountain biking, 38 percent are birding, and 76 percent are enjoying time with their families.

鈥淎s a whole, OHV users are more active in every single recreation activity relative to the general U.S. population,鈥 states the USFS. 鈥淔or some activities, OHV users participate at more than twice the national rate.鈥

鈥淭he people who participate are not who you think they are,鈥 says Taylor, of the National Off-Highway Vehicle Conservation Council. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e families. They鈥檙e people who are visiting remote areas that are virtually inaccessible by any other means. And just like you, they鈥檙e people enjoying nature.鈥

The point of this article isn鈥檛 to convince you that off-roading somehow has less impact on the environment than going for a hike鈥攊t doesn鈥檛. It鈥檚 simply to argue that the hobby doesn鈥檛 deserve its reputation as a villainous scourge on the planet. Our larger community of outdoor enthusiasts and nature lovers is too often guilty of denigrating otherwise like-minded people who look different from them or enjoy nature in different ways. We shouldn鈥檛 do that. Especially right now with our public lands under聽threat, us outdoorsy types need to stick together and find common ground from which we can defend the natural world we all love.

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