Beginner's look

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Hile_Troy

Need to contact Admin...
May 2, 2013
77
0
Stalybridge
I want to share my experience as a beginner in the world of bushcraft in case there are any 'just curious' browsers reading this forum wondering what all the fuss is about.

I have been lucky enough to live near what I, with a glorious lack of precision, like to call 'the countryside', for my whole life. As a child it was just a big, green mucky playground. There were things called trees (which I knew were trees because the swings I hung from them were called 'tree swings'). There were plants, which were roughly the same colour as the trees, but smaller, and flowers: like plants, but more colourful.

Then, about 8 weeks ago I decided I wanted to know a bit more. Partly because I'm tighter than a Beyoncé stage outfit and there's a ton of free stuff out there, but also because I like fire and axes and knives and things. This led to me poking around the tinterweb for bushcrafty sites, which then led me here. Some thread reading led to a couple of book purchases, which then led to me experimenting in the outdoors.

My first foray was also my first success when I caught the last day of the birch sap (that was about the second week of April, which shows how new I am to this). So simple... stab a tree and watch it dribble slightly sweet water.
Amazing.
I was so thrilled that something so cool had actually worked for me. Never mind that it wasn't quite the elixir of the gods that Ray Mears described it as, I now knew something. Those trees now had a value to me, they didnt just look good, (look at a Birch tree, how wierd and beautiful is that bark? Shining like a beacon, advertising itself to the world, saying 'here I am, ready for you to use'. Stunning) They had a use. The time I spent walking my dog doubled overnight. I remain stunned by how there is within a stones throw of my front door.

Soon, many trees had names (who knew so much of that scenery actually had names). I've always thought the natural world was a pretty, and pretty amazing place, but familiarity had bred contempt in me.

All has now changed. I wander through the centre of Manchester seeing, not weeds, but Garlic Mustard (edible and smells brilliant when crushed), Hairy Bittercress (also edible, with stunning little tiny white flowers) and Primroses (just outside Victoria Station, edible, beautiful but probably planted as apparently rare in the wild). My dog walk has become a wonderful potential larder (found my first St Georges mushrooms on Monday) though I've not yet had the bottle to eat anything yet, excepting a pignut that I was 100% confident about identifying. The wealth of resources in my immediate environment astounds me, and my immediate environment is hardly pristine wilderness. I regularly find the 'golf ball fungus', a sadly inedible but common fungus, with the drag-reducing dimpled skin, and some even have markings that look very much like they read 'Dunlop' and 'Slazenger'. The ground is littered with, well, litter, and peering through the locally widespread 'Satan's Baubles' I often spot many 'Tin can air-rifle target' fruits, again inedible.

The point is, if you are visiting this site, wondering if this bushcraft stuff is worth the bother, trust me. It is. You will be astounded at the breadth and depth of the new world that meets your eyes, even on your first day out after learning one new thing about it. It doesn't have to be about living like a viking 24/7, whittling a Breville with an axe or travelling to far flung parts of the world with strange looking letters in the placenames, it will utterly transform the very world you already know. Take my advice, fling open the door to wonder and amazement and enrich your life with a little more knowledge about the world in which you will spend most of it.

And sometimes you get to burn stuff too.
 

Bushwhacker

Banned
Jun 26, 2008
3,882
8
Dorset
Excellent, that's exactly how it should be - enjoying and understanding the natural world and not worrying about kit.
 

Stringmaker

Native
Sep 6, 2010
1,891
1
UK
The point is, if you are visiting this site, wondering if this bushcraft stuff is worth the bother, trust me. It is. You will be astounded at the breadth and depth of the new world that meets your eyes, even on your first day out after learning one new thing about it. It doesn't have to be about living like a viking 24/7, whittling a Breville with an axe or travelling to far flung parts of the world with strange looking letters in the placenames, it will utterly transform the very world you already know. Take my advice, fling open the door to wonder and amazement and enrich your life with a little more knowledge about the world in which you will spend most of it.

And sometimes you get to burn stuff too.

A superb summary of how I explain it to people; I see the world through different eyes now.

Well done for articulating so well how I imagine most of us feel.

:)
 

ol smokey

Full Member
Oct 16, 2006
433
2
Scotland
Hi there, wait till you have been out on a meet, even if it is just a few like minded bush rafters. This opens up a whole new world, new skills and new things to try, that you may just have read about on here. Like you I have had the countryside on my doorstep all my life, but it was not till I did my first overnighter with fellow bushcrafters that I realised what I was missing, and the variety of interests there were. There were about 40 in the group, and the number of skills present was uncanny, it felt like a fortnight's holiday. If you haven't tried a hammock try to get a shot in one. I have camped tent-wise
allof my life, but there is nothing like a hammock for comfort. Keep your eye on the meets section to see if there is anything going on in your area, you will likely be welcome along even as a day visitor if you do not wish to stay overnight.
Hope that you enjoy your involvement with BCUK and learn more and more. Cheers ol smokey.
 

Harvestman

Bushcrafter through and through
May 11, 2007
8,656
26
55
Pontypool, Wales, Uk
If there was a competition for best single post on the forum, 2013, that opening post would win it. I don't care that it is only May.

I'll tell you the best thing of all though. Once you start looking, you never stop learning new stuff.

The other day I was outdoors identifying stuff, and I turned a full 360 degrees and thought smugly to myself "You know, there probably isn't a single thing within line of sight in any direction that I can't identify, at least to a rough group". Then I looked at the tree next to me and went "Wait a minute. What the heck sort of a tree is that?".

You never stop learning. Welcome to the real world.
 

dwardo

Bushcrafter through and through
Aug 30, 2006
6,454
476
46
Nr Chester
If there was a competition for best single post on the forum, 2013, that opening post would win it. I don't care that it is only May.

I'll tell you the best thing of all though. Once you start looking, you never stop learning new stuff.

The other day I was outdoors identifying stuff, and I turned a full 360 degrees and thought smugly to myself "You know, there probably isn't a single thing within line of sight in any direction that I can't identify, at least to a rough group". Then I looked at the tree next to me and went "Wait a minute. What the heck sort of a tree is that?".

You never stop learning. Welcome to the real world.

Gets my vote :)
Never been a resource like this, especially not for free.
 

Hile_Troy

Need to contact Admin...
May 2, 2013
77
0
Stalybridge
Thanks folks, just felt the need (maybe after reading a couple of threads that had got a bit heated) to express how great it feels to know a bit more about the world around me. In a nouveau-hippie spread the love kind of a way. Also wanted to let you more experienced people know how valuable your knowledge and input is to new converts. Thanks again for reading.
 

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