I clean up after my own dogs after they've "done their business," and I clean up after yours, too. What?! A community canine cupcake custodian? Not necessarily by choice but yeah, I guess you could call me that. I was taught to "pack it in/pack it out". I take to heart the statement, "Leave nothing behind but footprints." Then why is it that most public places frequented by both on- or off-leash dogs and their ambivalent guardians look like a freakin' feces freeway? Not cleaning up after your dog makes me cRaZy!
Just because your sweet little Shih Tzu (pun intended) proficiently produces perfectly petite pooplettes, doesn't mean that they do not over time, contribute to the defecation decimation of public natural environments. They add up. Not to mention the health hazards that are attributed to not cleaning up after your dog.
As Kathy Diamond Davis states in her article, Poop! Cleaning Up After Your Dog for veterinarypartners.com, "Dog waste contaminates the ground and becomes a means of passing intestinal parasites and infections to dogs and people. Your own dog can be repeatedly re-infested by parasites in this way. Picking up feces prevents a great deal of the contamination, especially if diarrhea is not involved. Cleanup can reduce veterinary expenses and might even save on human doctor bills. Because of contamination as well as smell and mess, dog waste is highly offensive to many people in the community. It often becomes a reason to ban dogs from areas. Of course the dogs can't clean up after themselves, so this is a people problem rather than a dog problem. It's easy to enact "no dogs allowed" rules, and then the people who clean up suffer right along with the ones who don't."
I was beginning to worry that the inevitable "no dogs allowed"or "dogs must be on leash at all times" rules may well be enacted after a recent visit with my two dogs to a nearby multi-thousand acre preserve. The mountains! The blue skies! The vistas! The famed New Mexico light! The trails! The poop....everywhere. I really had never seen anything quite like it. The disregard... And this coming from a former animal shelter volunteer where a plethora of poop piles are picked up and properly disposed of on a daily basis by dedicated dog walkers extraordinaire. So what gives? What makes a local dog park or a hiking trail in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains any different? Access to and use of this beautiful aforementioned preserve does not give anyone a free bathroom pass for their dog. Yes, of course your dog may shoot off into the chamisa ahead of you to "do the doo" while out of your eyesight. I've observed people glancing over their shoulder while their dog deposits their doo-doo on the side of the trail. Upon completion, the guardian enthusiastically calls to their dog, "Good boy! Let's go, Buddy!" I've been known to follow in pursuit while waving a friendly, forest green biodegradable poop bag. "Wait a minute! You forgot something! "
Chances are that you have a gazillion yellow plastic sleeves just perfect for picking up poop if you subscribe to home delivery of the local newspaper. Don't use a cloth bag at the grocery store? (In this day and age, why not? But that's another story...) Inevitably, you will be asked, "Paper or plastic?" While not a first choice for doggie doo-doo disposal, plastic bags are everywhere and sadly, they are practically a species all their own. Relatively inexpensive biodegradable corn starch pet waste bags are available at most big box and local pet supply stores. Really, there's no excuse for indifference...
Freaked out that your hand has to touch the mud bunny on the side of the trail? Get over it. It's part of being a responsible pet guardian. Stick your hand in the bag, turn it inside out after claiming your prize, and tie the ends together. Drop it in a trash receptacle on your way out of the dog park/hiking trail, or bring it home and put it in the trash bin. Be respectful. Be courteous. Take pride in your surroundings. And bring poop bags with you wherever you go. Make a habit of it. After a while, you won't have to withstand the passerby's accusatory, laser-like stare at your dog's purposeful hunched posture while you sheepishly mumble, "I forgot my poop bags..." Poop happens. Be prepared.
While we don't live adjacent to an ocean here in New Mexico, animal waste is definitely hazardous to our water sources. Katherine Noyes describes this non-point source pollution in an article for VolunteerGuide.org as what happens when snow melt or rain carries the pollutants that are on the ground into rivers, lakes, groundwater, wetlands and coastal waters. A superbly funny, yet to-the-point public service announcement was produced by Puget Sound Starts Here. They teamed up with musician Martin Luther, to bring awareness to the effects of pet waste on the Puget Sound. Remember the saying, "I don't swim in your toilet, so don't pee in my pool?" Check out this marketing masterpiece on YouTube titled Dog Doogity. You may just find yourself happily humming this tune while scooping your dog's poop!