I imagine the draw of bushcraft is different for every one.
For me I grew up playing in the woods, lighting fires and building dens with my friends, was it bushcraft? I think not, to kids it was just fun, we all had old army surplus jack knives and pinched matches out the house.
Loving being outdoors lead me to join the army from school and I served 15 years. Being lucky enough to be one of the last cadres to do the all arms survival, escape and evasion courses run by the SAS it cemented my fascination with the subject. But I had never heard of bushcraft until in 1991 I found a copy of RM's Survival handbook in a shop in Padstow.
Suddenly survive and E&E took on a different taint and I was hooked.
I did a few of the woodlore courses when I left the army, studied tracking under shadowhawk, bashed a few stones up with Will Lord and a few other bits and pieces to boot.
In the early noughties I travels to scandinavia a lot and practiced the skills I had learnt in Sweden, Norway and Finland and loved it.
Then about 2010 I had a complete mental melt down and was diagnosed with PTSD. I lost two years of memory and came very close to ending it all. Luckily I got help from Combat stress.
Through out all this time, the really low times especially I always had bushcraft as my safe place, my safety net where I could escape to and try to deal with things. I never understood until then what the draw of bushcraft was to me but now I do. The draw of bushcraft to me is all about a freedom of the spirit, mind and body. Its a way of escaping the world, of escaping reality and the dark memories, of escaping people.
For me bushcraft has to be as pure as I can make it, I don't carry loads of kit, I don't do luxury, I rough it, even to the point of going out in winter onto the moors with just a blanket to sleep under sometimes. I go native for want of a better term.
But some how it re-sets me, its like a drug, a calming salve. for me bushcraft and my time in the field isn't a leisure activity its a necessity.
Whether you call it bushcraft or woodcraft or survival skills it doesnt really matter - for myself its just a part of life and one I will need to be able to do until the day I die as the alternative is a very scary, violent place.
The reason I have shared this is that I know there are a few ex-service people on the forum and some may be fighting the same battle as I was, probably without knowing, I didn't, I thought it was just me. And I wanted to let them know that many of us have been there and come out the other side. Not all wounds gained in battle are visible, but they are still a medal of honor. Help is out there. Feel free to PM me if you need to reach out.
So what is the draw of bushcraft, for me its so much more than the whole, it allows me to be mindful, to escape the anxiety and pressure, to be myself on my own terms and it allows nature to help and heal me.
Wow reading that back it was a bit heavy, sorry, but if it helps someone else reading it then I am content to share.
I understand now that bushcraft is a place I was searching for to escape to, its a safe place. I know for many people its a hobby and they play at bushcraft and that is great, I am happy for them but the skills I learnt saved me, when I lost everything and was homeless the skills I had learnt helped feed me and keep me alive, literally.
There is a Robert Service poem "the men who dont fit in," that's bushcraft to me and long may it be so.