Is this littering?

Ummmmmmmmmmmm, I HOPE so, because I do the same thing!!! Or, save up the chicken bones and dump them in known seagull hangouts later on that same day.

I don’t think food is littering. Even if it’s missed by a critter, it biodegrades.

ACK! Meant to add that I agreed with the OPs qualification that it be a WOODED road not a highway.

But now, after reading, I’m not so sure. Should I not be taking my chcken bones or apple cores to the “Seagull Cafe” or dropping them on the not well-traveled side roads?

I guess not.

I think there’s a difference between apple cores and chicken bones.

I don’t see anything at all wrong with throwing an apple core out the window (provided it’s a semi-rural-ish area, and there are no other cars around), but chicken bones? No way. Find a trash can for the KFC leftovers.

There is a wooded lot behind our house into which I will toss any food that has gone off: eggs, oranges, grapes, cooked shrimp, you name it.

This lot goes back for about a mile. I consider it my personal compost heap. Anything wrong with that?

Sorry, but I must chime in on the orange peel thing. They are totally biodegradeable. The dried up orange peels are in the process of breaking down. They don’t take all that long, and they will completely biodegrade. Completely.

Whether or not an item is biodegradable isn’t the point (IMHO). Toliet tissue is biodegradable…but we’d all agree that toliet tissue discarded on the side of the road–particularly if it’s used–would be an eyesore.

Banana peels take forever to biodegrade. I believe many state parks forbid people from tossing out their peels because they’re safety hazards on hiking trails. Imagine breaking your neck on a banana peel that’s five years old!

I would never toss foodstuff into a visible area, like a street or sidewalk. But if I was in the woods or next to a pond somewhere, I wouldn’t hesitate throwing food out.

Tapiaco’s cite says 2 years for orange peel decomposition, while this one says 6 months. Either way, it’s not like an orange peel will automatically disappear if you toss it out of your car window.

if you chucked it out of your car window and it didn’t land in a dustbin, then yes, you are littering. Cooked chicken bones are dangerous things for any animal to eat …

Oo… night of the undead thread.

We also had/have a very large 80 acre backyard - into which we toss our biodegradable foodstuffs, with the exception of meat scraps or breads. Those bits attract the local coyotes and foxes. No need to have predators so close to the house. For that particular reason, I would avoid throwing those sorts of things out of my car, but many other good reasons listed in this thread will have me thinking twice about anything (the only one I’m really guilty of is banana peels - they stink up a hot car fast. Orange peels make it smell purty :smiley: )