She founded Clean Hikers, a group dedicated to
picking up trash from there and the country's other mountain
parks and turning it into art.
"Junk art is more compelling and well received by people, rather
than just saying let's not litter. We can make an interesting
image and it attracts people's attention," 30-year-old Kim said.
She spoke in front of a collage of a crying cat tagged with the
slogan "Save the World", created by herself and other members of
the group on the summit of Mount Mani on Ganghwa Island, a park
outside Seoul where many stray cats roam.
It and similar collages of a fish, a bird, a butterfly and a
human being that the group has displayed on mountaintops were
made entirely from trash, including a face mask, collected
nearby by members with steel tongs and stuffed into plastic
bags.
With curbs linked to COVID-19 having restricted indoor
activities and large gatherings, more South Koreans are spending
time out in the open air.
The number of visitors to three major national parks close to
the country's big cities has risen more than 20 percent in
October compared to the same month last year, according to the
Korea National Park Service (KNPS).
Visits to the 22 national parks it manages generated more than
800 tonnes of rubbish in the first nine months, it added.
While most of that trash goes into bins, some does not, and Kim
is grateful for the new surge of interest in Clean Hikers that
the pandemic has also inspired.
"(But) we cannot clean up the whole mountains. The more
important thing is keep doing this activity, tell people about
this, and make more people join. This is much more crucial,"
said Kim.
(Reporting by Minwoo Park; editing by John Stonestreet)
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