Introducing Kristine & The Pooster
by Kathleen Meyer
September 2013
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Does a bear shit in the woods? Kristine
holding a double-bagging product full of
yup”!

Kristine Route is nothing short of amazing . . .

Working with AmeriCorps in Cooper Landing, Alaska, for the past two years, she’s been developing a program to promote a landscape free of human toilet trash. I met her in March of this year when she emailed me with a couple of questions, and we’ve been working together ever since, teamed-up as two river runners oddly passionate about the same subject: nonproliferation of human poop.

With that quick introduction, we want to unveil our poster project, an educational broadside that Kristine has dubbed
The Pooster. Our gift to wild places. Available in generic form FREE, by means of a digital file that anyone can have printed. Or, we can customize it to your locale and add regional logos.
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We envision Poosters pinned up on backcountry bulletin boards (at boat launches, trailheads, and fishing accesses), where they can begin slipping the topic into people’s thought patterns, and perhaps staving off official pack-it-out regulations. Poosters are especially suited, we think, to high-use public wild lands and in areas designated wilderness. But also as pre-trip reminders in outdoor equipment stores; fly-fishing shops; tourist information centers; canoe, ski, and bike rental establishments; and those many convenience stops that offer last-minute camping supplies. The Pooster makes the perfect partner for sales of outdoor toilet products: the revolutionary new pack-it-out bags, handy backpacker trowels, feminine urinary funnels, and, of course, a stack of How to Shit in the Woods.
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The wider story of The Pooster’s origins lives at www.thepooster.com.

Cruise on over and take a gander at our various
Poosters. They’re already working their magic in Alaska, Idaho, and Montana. Let us know what you think! Do you know a place that’s in need of a Pooster?

Since this blog post launched on Sept 19th, requests for digital files have come in from Oregon, Nevada, North Dakota, Colorado, Illinois, Alberta, New Zealand, and additional locations in Montana, Idaho, and Alaska. Way to go!

Wild and wondrous places can heal our harried, sagging spirits . . . join the protectors who are reciprocating, in tending to the beauty of those places.
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Introducing Kristine & The Pooster
by Kathleen Meyer
September 2013
Stacks Image 381

Does a bear shit in the woods?
Kristine holding a double-bagging product full of
yup”!

Kristine Route is nothing short of amazing . . .

Working with AmeriCorps in Cooper Landing, Alaska, for the past two years, she’s been developing a program to promote a landscape free of human toilet trash. I met her in March of this year when she emailed me with a couple of questions, and we’ve been working together ever since, teamed-up as two river runners oddly passionate about the same subject: nonproliferation of human poop.

With that quick introduction, we want to unveil our poster project, an educational broadside that Kristine has dubbed
The Pooster. Our gift to wild places. Available in generic form FREE, by means of a digital file that anyone can have printed. Or, we can customize it to your locale and add regional and agency logos.
Stacks Image 387
We envision Poosters pinned up on backcountry bulletin boards (at boat launches, trailheads, and fishing accesses), where they can begin slipping the topic into people’s thought patterns, and perhaps staving off official pack-it-out regulations. Poosters are especially suited, we think, to high-use public wild lands and in areas designated wilderness. But also as pre-trip reminders in outdoor equipment stores; fly-fishing shops; tourist information centers; canoe, ski, and bike rental establishments; and those many convenience stops that offer last-minute camping supplies. The Pooster makes the perfect partner for sales of outdoor toilet products: the revolutionary new pack-it-out bags, handy backpacker trowels, feminine urinary funnels, and, of course, a stack of How to Shit in the Woods.
Stacks Image 391
The wider story of The Pooster’s origins lives at www.thepooster.com.

Cruise on over and take a gander at our various
Poosters. They are already working their magic in Alaska, Idaho, and Montana. Let us know what you think! Do you know a place that’s in need of a Pooster?

Since this entry launched on Sept 19th, requests for digital files have come in from Oregon, Nevada, North Dakota, Colorado, Illinois, Alberta, New Zealand, and additional locations in Montana, Idaho, and Alaska. Way to go!

Wild and wondrous places can heal our harried, sagging spirits . . . join the protectors who are reciprocating, and tending to the beauty of those places.
Stacks Image 498

Whoops! Comments from my previous site have not made it here yet. But any new comments will post.

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© 2011 by Author Kathleen Meyer  •  All Rights Reserved 
Web site design by
RapidRiver.us

© 2011 by Author Kathleen Meyer  •  All Rights Reserved 
Web site design by
RapidRiver.us