Put it this way, I recognised you instantly, so you aren't a stranger
and you do post, so you're helping keep things alive and interesting too
Same here, totally in agreement.
Forums have waves and troughs. The rise of Ray Mears, a fantastically enthusiastic and knowledgable man, coincided with people like Benedict Allen, a fearless and brave explore of what is left of the unexplored planet, while Bear Grylls, though later, catered for the survival approach.
All these things appeal to us as humans in a very deep way, and the simple appeal of sitting on the sofa watching it created an interest for getting out there and having a go. This required knowledge and specialist questions, thus forums like BCUK were born.
Now some people follow the lifestyles to which they are accustomed, be that sofa surfer, Inuit, Sami, weekend woodland walker, light hiker, cycle hiker, woodland manager, hurdlemaker etc etc, and will still post questions and comment. But I think some of the faddishness has gone as people go through the phases. Also much of the basic knowledge is available on the internet. Google will point a lot of people here, but whether they wish to join up, login, and participate is much less likely.
I don’t do bushcraft as such. You’ll find me carving a tent peg if I need one, but I’m not hanging pots over fires on sticks with notches cut out. But I’ll very happily make a spoon or a pointy stick, sat by the fire that I started with a lighter. A fire that won’t show as I leave, created from freely available dead wood. I prefer gas for my light and cooking, I don’t forage much except mushrooms and fruit.
I don’t see BCUK as losing anything. I object to threads being railroaded with irrelevant, off topic chatter, taken off course and then left lying in the gutter. But I’ll freely admit I’m no saint as a member either.