Buckets of locally sourced San Francisco trash are heading President Donald Trump's way.

On Saturday, Reps. Jackie Speier, D-Hillsborough, and Jared Huffman, D-San Rafael, and volunteers from the San Francisco Dog Owners Group weathered winds and heavy rain to clean up trash from Ocean Beach and Lands End, KQED reported.

The beaches are just two in the long list of federal sites that have been impacted as a result of the government shutdown, now on its third week. Without staff, some national parks have been in disarray. The National Park Service has even tapped entrance fees to pay for expanded operations at popular sites, officials said Sunday.

The shutdown has had graver consequences too; on Christmas Day, it delayed an investigation into the death of a man at Yosemite National Park, KQED reported.

Even San Francisco Public Works crews took it upon themselves to handle overflowing garbage cans and pick up trash near Lands End and the San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park. Residents wanted to help as well.

"This is basically citizens standing up and saying, 'If you guys can't do it yourselves because of the shutdown, we will definitely help clean up the parks,'" Sally Stephens, who chairs the dog owner's group, told KQED.

After a day of collecting trash, Speier and Huffman left two bins behind, labeling "Trump's Trash." They told KQED they plan to bring the trash to D.C and drop it off at the White House.

Speier told KQED it was a stunt — a stunt to "equal President Trump's stunt."

"I'll tell you what's not a stunt," Huffman said. "It's the diapers and the coffee cups and the burrito wrappers and the trash that's piling up in [National] Park Service facilities all over this country because of what President Trump has done. His actions have real-world consequences."

Muir Woods will close beginning Monday due to the government shutdown.