I get put into both categories by other folks. I could give a flip how others classify me! I have taken course work in both areas and use these skills in my outdoor pursuits. However, I have spent a lifetime participating in many different outdoor and outdoor related cultural activities, scoutcraft, camp craft, woodsmanship, camp cooking, infantry field craft, reconnaissance, tracking, fur bearer trapping, hunting, archery, axemanship, backpacking, canoeing, kayaking, mountain biking, camping, land navigation, wood working, wood carving, longhunter reenacting, muzzleloading, Native American crafts and dance, wildlife management, hunter education and other outdoor activities. I have also spent the better part of 25 years working in the parks and recreation maintenance field. Personally, I do not put myself solely into either group and I believe that the skill sets overlap. Many of the skill sets of the outdoor activities I have listed overlap. I look upon my experience and my continued learning as becoming a well rounded outdoorsman. I have done the roughing it bit and I have done the fancy camping bit. I have done the military survival bit and I have done the native skills bit. I like all of it and try to learn and use bits from each. As I age and the body wears down, I am happy to say that I appreciate a warm fire, good camp food and great outdoor fellowship.
Gordy