In my youth, bushcraft was a means of escape, it was safer at 5 years old to wander the countryside alone, than it was to be at home. As a teenager, to get out in the woods was therapy, helped me grieve with the loss of my father, he was a woodsman, and to be there was like I was still with him. Since 17 I have spent the larger portion of my life living in the woodlands and wild places of the UK. No family and having being hurt or traumatised by every human I had ever known led me to live a life of solitude alongside nature the best I can. Ironically even my family name means to live /come from the woods/valley! I tried to get along in modern society, even was married and had children, but in the end it just proved that I don't belong in that way of life. So personally for me, its not a hobby, nor a way of life, it is my life. I do now live in a house, but its set in 200 acres of mixed woodland, with my girlfriend, who has the same attitude to life as I do, and were expecting and our little human will be brought up to understand how we live our lives and that bushcraft is our lives. Everything I do everyday has some aspect of bushcraft or wilderness living involved. Without getting too long winded thats the best description I can give of what bushcraft is to me, all I can add is that I dont call it bushcraft, I call it living.
Best wishes
Jon
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