What is the principle of using land without damaging the environment?
What is "Leave No Trace"?
What are some examples of durable surfaces to walk on outdoors?
What are rocks, sand, and gravel?
Where is the best place to set up camp in busy areas?
What is on an already used campsite?
What happens when plants and soil are damaged beyond recovery?
What is soil erosion?
Walking on durable surfaces helps protect what?
What is the soil and vegetation?
How far should you camp from a water source to protect wildlife and plants?
What is at least 200 feet (or 60 meters)?
What happens to the environment when pollution increases due to outdoor travel?
What is habitat loss and harm to wildlife?
Why should you avoid stepping on fragile plants like moss or lichens?
What is they take a long time to recover?
Where is a good place to camp in dry or rocky areas?
What is on gravel or rock surfaces?
What should we avoid to protect nature while hiking or camping?
What is creating new trails or damaging plants?
What surface should you walk on to prevent damaging fragile ecosystems?
What is rock, sand, or packed snow?
What should you avoid when camping near rivers or lakes?
What is disturbing wildlife and polluting the water?
What is an important reason to protect the land while traveling outdoors?
What is to preserve nature for future generations?
What is one benefit of traveling on durable surfaces like gravel or rock?
What is reducing trail widening and soil erosion?
When you leave a campsite, what should you do to restore it?
What is cover damaged areas with leaves or twigs?