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  Touring the green way

Touring the green way

Published : Jul 21, 2016, 10:38 pm IST
Updated : Jul 21, 2016, 10:38 pm IST

Like many of us, Delhi-based Mallika Arya loves to travel a lot.

Mallika Arya
 Mallika Arya

Like many of us, Delhi-based Mallika Arya loves to travel a lot. She has taken a year off to travel around the country and South-East Asia, but what makes her trip different is that she has pledged to make it as eco-friendly as possible.

Mallika recently completed a two-year teaching fellowship, which inspired her to take up the challenge. “I’ve worked closely with kids for the past two years and it really made me think. We teach them so much about being environmentally conscious and celebrate the Earth Day every year, so I got exposed to all this and decided to do something about it.” says Mallika, who travels only in buses and trains in the country.

The 23-year-old started her journey from Himachal Pradesh in May and now plans to traverse the lands of the South. In her travel bag, one can always find a biodegradable toothbrush and coffee-mug made from bamboo and fibre, a reusable straw, a shampoo bar and her own water bottle. She has made many lifestyle changes to make this trip possible and it has not always been easy.

“The first response I get from people is, ‘She carries her own straw! What a freak!’ In the past three months I had to buy a bottle of mineral water once in Manali because I could not find a tap anywhere, and I felt so bad,” she says.

Her journey includes Cambodia, Thailand and other South-East Asian countries, which are very highly dependent on plastic. “I really like talking to locals when I travel, so I hope that when they hear about what I am doing, they get influenced and make some changes in their lifestyle,” she says.

Her travel is helping her explore this style of living and new innovations. She found a company in Pondicherry who are bringing back cloth in place of sanitary pads. “Nobody ever talks about how long it takes for our sanitary waste to decompose. Just one pad takes about 400 years to completely decompose. So, I am looking for alternative means. Since I will be travelling and cloth is not a viable option for me, I am planning to use the menstrual cup, which lasts for a good nine months or so,” she says.

Talking about what she expects this tour to do for her, she says, “I am nowhere close to being perfect, but I do hope that one day, I reach a stage where I produce zero waste,” she says promisingly.