As much as I love the countryside,and I do believe we have the best in the world.Id like to visit a true wilderness scandinavia springs to mind any recomendations?
I’ve spent a fair bit of time in Knoydart and though it is wild it isn’t wilderness in my mind. Pre the Clearances I read that there were a thousand fighting men living in the peninsula which would suggest the total population would be perhaps 4-5 times that. In some of the glens that are empty now you can see many a derelict shieling and even lines of agriculture that aren’t apparent unless you look from above. Most of the Highlands were forested in the past but are now managed estates for deer with ancient forests covering only 2%. I think I read that only the Cairngorm plateau truly represents a wilderness in the UK. Clearly the definition is subjective so I guess it depends on your point of view.Knoydart?
The forests off bavarian alps in germany look apealing .I guess true wilderness is closer in France. Like Jura mountains.
Or Schwarzwald in Germany.
Yeh carpathian mountains look amazing.The Romanian portion of the Carpates is probably the only true wilderness left in Europe. You might bump into a bear or wolves but if you get into difficulties, you're on your own.
I was thinking more along the lines off huge forested expanses ,the type were you climb a big hill and trees reach the distant far horizon and this continues over many hills /horizons akaska/russia type thing.We really have to define wild and wilderness, as you say, to be able to come up with any kind of examples.
Is is untrodden by man? but we are an animal and part of the wilderness.
Is it unshaped by man? there are plenty of places (albeit not huge) that are unshaped by man.
Is it how far away it is from a road, a rail track, a house? those things don't necessarily guarantee sanctuary.
Is it the size of an unchanging landscape?
Is it because of wild dangers such as wolves or bears? I could die from a hornet sting so I don't think any specific threat makes it a wilderness.
Is it the lack of communication? well, most parts of the Powys uplands would count then
I have spent years exploring maps of the UK and finding ravines and gorges in the hills and mountains that I would classify as wilderness - untrodden probably for centuries, isolated, dangerous to explore, wild, peaceful, and where you could spend days and not see a soul. Without a signal, if you slipped and broke a leg, you could easily die - is that not wilderness?
The largest wilderness I have explored are the deserts - in particular the Sahara and the Namib and Skeleton Coast. However, I was more at risk backpacking the Yorkshire Moors solo as a teenager.
Just my rather random thoughts
Like this? If so, welcome to eastern Finland.I was thinking more along the lines off huge forested expanses ,the type were you climb a big hill and trees reach the distant far horizon and this continues over many hills /horizons akaska/russia type thing.
LOL, very true, you just kind of forgot to tell that that is all kind of cultivated forest.Like this? If so, welcome to eastern Finland.
Sounds like you might like the Cevennes in southern France. Not really wilderness in the true sense but parts are wild & remote. It was there that I saw my first Golden Eagle. The hills are deceptive though, climb one & you're too knackered to climb another.,the type were you climb a big hill and trees reach the distant far horizon and this continues over many hills /horizons