Why I Still Like Burning Trash

Anybody who has read this blog for a little while knows I am at least a little bit of a pyromanic. I like starting campfires, watching them burn, and I really like watching trash burn. While I’m against destruction of valuable or useful property, burning waste material and campfires under controlled conditions is so much fun.

Dump

People say burning trash is bad, it pollutes and it smells pretty nasty, especially if you have a smoldering fire with lots of plastic. It’s hard to disagree, although after ones burns trash for a while, you hardly even notice the smell of trash smoke. Indeed, in our vast rural areas, the impact is pretty low.

Smolders

And I still think it’s a lot of fun.

  • I love watching paper burn, the faces, the pictures, the text blacken up and burn with flashy yellow flames.
  • I love watching plastic deform in the fire, drip, melt, and burn, with bright and colorful flames. The color varies on the plastic, vinyl chlorides burn blue and green.
  • I love watching as the flames rip through the trash bags and chew their insides. Watching the destruction of waste, converted into soot and into smoke.

Hell, I’m such a pyromaniac. It gives me such an increadible high!

Pay Stub

Burning wood and campfires is fun. The flicker of the flames and coals can mesmerise one. Yet, it lacks the drama and the fun of burning trash. Their simply aren’t the neat compounds and materials in wood, that make trash burning so interesting to watch. Their isn’t the statification of watching your waste material disappear before your eyes.

Flames

I really like watching trash burn. While no longer legal anywheres in NY State, I still burn trash when I’m camping in hot campfires. I also keep my “burnable” trash in summer, and burn it when camping. It’s destroyed almost instantly, but with all the beauty of a trash fire. I don’t litter, I carefully seperate unburnables and makes sure not leave any trace behind.

 Flames

Some day I am going to own a place out in the country, and probably not in New York State. As a real country boy, I’m going to have my burn barrels, I will burn all of my burnable trash, far away from the neighbors who might otherwise complain about the smell that I actually kind of like. I’m not against recycling, and indeed I will seperate out cans and glass, but I sure love to watch and see my garbage burn.

…I so love burning the trash.

Firepit and Table

This is the fire pit, camping gear box, water bottles, picnic table, and most importantly, the cooler filled with ice and beer.

Taken on Friday September 3, 2010 at Moose River Plains.

Total Privacy

The site I found for camping offered total privacy. I was far off the road, I could change without hiding in the truck, take a shower, buck naked. This made me happy. Being nude is fun.

Taken on Friday September 3, 2010 at Moose River Plains.

Camping at Campsite 57

When I went up to Moose River Plains, on Friday morning, I sought a site up in Sandy Plains, far off the road so I could have one with lots of peace and quiet.

Taken on Friday September 3, 2010 at Moose River Plains.

Silver Run

This is the Silver Run (creek), along Campsite 2. It's nice that there is a water source so close to the campsite.

Taken on Friday September 3, 2010 at Moose River Plains.

Campsite 2 Closer Up

This is campsite two, with the picnic table and fire pit. The outhouse is across the road, and shared between several sites. I didn't find it until I had already dug a cat hole for taking a shit, and burning the toilet paper. The campsite is abutted by the Silver Run (creek).

Taken on Friday September 3, 2010 at Moose River Plains.

Campsite 2

I arrived quite late to Moose River Plains on Thursday night, after not getting out of work until well after 5:30 PM. So it was a dark drive up. I did not want to camp at Cedar River Flow, so I drove up the Moose River Plains Road, but it was so dark and late, I decided to get crpa one of the first sites I saw.

Taken on Friday September 3, 2010 at Moose River Plains.