My 13 year old son and I take "bushcraft" weekends several times a year. We purposely take an absolute minimum kit. Currently we make pretty comfortable camps with just the clothes on our backs, our knives, flint and steel, and small cooking pot. A lot of this depends on the weather and temperature. Minimum kit survival in wet cold weather is an experts challenge but we are working up to it.
All this started out on our property that consists of 31 acres of land with access to several hundred acres of adjacent land. It varies from steep laurel choked hillsides with hardwoods to meadows, to pine thickets to a large creek bottom thick with vines and weed beds. We have a camper trailer with electric and water on the property but it is off limts during these weekends unless we get in real trouble. We do keep a primitive camp site near the creek but we build new shelters and hearths every time we go out.
The reason we started on our own private property was so we could cut wood and vines, build shelters, fish traps, cordage and carry out other functions of primitive camping and bushcrafting without violating park and forest land regulations. We also hunt on this property for small game and deer during the season so I know that game, fish and plant food sources are available and were to find them.
The skills we develop and hone on these outings are what bushcrafting is all about. When we do go out camping with tents, tarps, sleeping bags and other modern gear we feel a bit like astronauts. You see possibilities in every creek, every weed bed, every bit of wood when you know wood craft. It never ceases to amaze our friends how busy we stay in camp when we go on group backpacking trips and how much we find to eat and use as tools. Our packs are lighter and so are our steps on the trail.
It's our heads that are full. Knowledge and experience is the best thing you can take camping.
All this started out on our property that consists of 31 acres of land with access to several hundred acres of adjacent land. It varies from steep laurel choked hillsides with hardwoods to meadows, to pine thickets to a large creek bottom thick with vines and weed beds. We have a camper trailer with electric and water on the property but it is off limts during these weekends unless we get in real trouble. We do keep a primitive camp site near the creek but we build new shelters and hearths every time we go out.
The reason we started on our own private property was so we could cut wood and vines, build shelters, fish traps, cordage and carry out other functions of primitive camping and bushcrafting without violating park and forest land regulations. We also hunt on this property for small game and deer during the season so I know that game, fish and plant food sources are available and were to find them.
The skills we develop and hone on these outings are what bushcrafting is all about. When we do go out camping with tents, tarps, sleeping bags and other modern gear we feel a bit like astronauts. You see possibilities in every creek, every weed bed, every bit of wood when you know wood craft. It never ceases to amaze our friends how busy we stay in camp when we go on group backpacking trips and how much we find to eat and use as tools. Our packs are lighter and so are our steps on the trail.
It's our heads that are full. Knowledge and experience is the best thing you can take camping.