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Perhaps the deeper ethical question is not how to behave in a crowd, but: do we have a right to solitude?
Perhaps the deeper ethical question is not how to behave in a crowd, but: do we have a right to solitude?
Sundog鈥檚 Almanac of Ethical Answers

Do I Have to Share My Campsite?

Dispersed camping is getting less dispersed. Our ethics columnist weighs in on whether you need to share.

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Dear Sundog:We were camped legally鈥攁nd for free鈥攐ff a dirt road on public lands in the middle of the desert. When Friday night rolled around,the place was packed鈥攁ll the sites were taken. Then someone pulled in and asked if we would share our site with them. We鈥檇 gotten there early so we could be alone. Were we ethically obligated to say yes? 鈥擡ncroached in Cholla

Dear Encroached: Your instincts are right. Nothing beats hauling your truckload听of beer coolers and puffy mattresses and folding chairs and half-cord of split pine into the hinterland and setting up a free campsite on some desolate piece of ground and proceeding to do nothing for a few days.

Alas, your spring break clusterfudge has become oh so common. That secret road where you once boondocked outside Glacier or Moab or Sedona or Bishop got Instafamous, ranked high on the free-camping apps, became a rogue KOA for every fun-hog fifth wheel and Silicon Valley Sprinter van seeking solitude in the sticks. Then the pandemic brought a whole 鈥檔other wave of newbies, a mix of telecommuters liberated from their hometown offices听and desperate tourists blocked from their regular destinations: Las Vegas, March Madness, and the Yucatan. Even a seasoned vagabond like Sundog shakes his exasperated head and mutters, 鈥淒on鈥檛 these people have jobs?鈥

Of course, nobody intends to camp in a flash mob, amid听the toilet paper fluttering from any tree limb that has not already been snapped off for roasting weenies. But once we鈥檝e arrived, it鈥檚 too late. It鈥檚 getting dark. If the remote primitive camps are all taken, we know all the nearby developed sites are also full. We鈥檝e driven hours. We can鈥檛 turn back. This is the situation of the wanderers, Encroached, who asked you to share your precious site. So, must you offer them refuge?

The short answer is no, but the longer answer is probably yes.

It鈥檚 your site, finders keepers, first-come听first-served, and that could be the end of the story. You are not ethically bound to compensate for their poor planning. But consider for a moment: if you refuse, what will these stragglers do? More than likely they will heave their vehicle up onto some pristine soils and flora and simply make a new site. After all,听that鈥檚 how all these sites came to exist in the first place, by industrious Americans driving upon nature and rutting back and forth until the turf was flat enough for a good night鈥檚 rest.

The last thing your secret spot needs is more desperately implemented sites. Once the crowd arrives, the only way to save it is, instead of spreading people more widely into more sites, to pack them more densely into the ones already there. For the greater good, you might welcome Jesus and Mary and Joseph. It鈥檚 good for the land, and you might even make a new friend.

Your question opens a broader one about crowds in the outdoors. There was a time when camping seemed inherently virtuous. First, you were roughing it, doing without electricity and the luxuries of home. That alone was an admirable Spartan minimalism. Next, there is merit in living, if only briefly, among animals, plants, rivers, and rocks, merely to remind us that humans are not the planet鈥檚 only species. And lastly, your verypresence in the desert or woods indicated that this was a precious place, one worth preserving, not a place for corporations to incinerate toxic waste or for citizens to dump mattresses and refrigerators. But is that still true?

By the old metric, we might call these mobs a success. Anyone who has been a guide, writer, policymaker, or advocate for the earth has repeated some version of this maxim: the more people who enjoy nature, the more people who will work to protect it. This may well be the founding principle of environmentalism, dating back to Theodore Roosevelt鈥檚 hunting expeditions and John Muir鈥檚 establishing of the Sierra Club with its excursions for greenhorns. Once they鈥檝e seen the Badlands or Yosemite Valley, the average citizen will be filled with sacred rejuvenation听and will support efforts to preserve those places for prosperity. Right?

But it鈥檚 a hard pill to swallow, to see some pristine place teeming with generators and yahoos running their Razrs over sagebrush, to tell myself,听鈥淏ut they will vote to fund the Forest Service?鈥

Perhaps the deeper ethical question is not how to behave in a crowd, but听do we have a right to solitude? We certainly have a right to enjoy public lands鈥攃itizens own them. But can we insist that we get them to ourselves? Surely not in national parks, which have been overrun for decades听and have beaten back the congestion with fees, permits, reservations, and densely packed听campgrounds. But what about 鈥渢hat old dirt road鈥 where we used to be alone?听Does the fact that we 鈥渄iscovered鈥 solitude a decade or two ago give us the right to expect it now?

I think not. By making the claim that our right to solitude trumps someone else鈥檚 right to pitch a tent 50 feet away, we enter a new thicket of ethical quandaries, chief among them the fact that many 鈥減ublic鈥 lands were taken from tribal听nations through violence, genocide, and broken treaties. The claim of ownership by white settlers is historically dubious; a right听to exclusivity does not hold up either ethically or legally.

So, for now, we might just learn to grieve that place, that memory, and learn to avoid our old haunts during high season and holidays. Solitude may still be found, but it鈥檚 likely to be in wilderness鈥攑laces where cars are banned. Lace up your boots and saddle your pony. And that鈥檚 a topic for another day.

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