My family group (and many others) we live in the bush, or what you call forest. It is for the most part a place we call home. We rarely ever visit towns or cities. We come to the settlements only for buying stuff such as things we like to eat special, clothing, equipment & to sell furs. We live there and get a lot of our food from hunting. Before I came to England I did not know what you meant by bushcraft (we have no word for this in Cree).
For us it is the simple act of knowing and being in the forest without too much trouble. But much of what we do, people from outside don't know or understand why we do things the way we do, but we've learned from our fathers & mothers how to make the forest home with what we have. For us hunters bushcraft is not separate from knowing the way of animals, birds,insects and plants.
For us knowing only one without the other would be no sense and this puzzled me when I saw some people in England practice what they called bushcraft but could not identify birds or animals or even identify common trees and their uses. For us, bushcraft is much wider set of skills without which we would not be able to live in the forests for long or comfortably.
Enjou namiste
This. I am not part of the Swedish indigenous people ( the Same people) but I worked very intimately with them while in the army.
My dad tought me what he knew, which is a lot, but the Same tought me the real stuff.
I feel the same when it comes to the Brits, even people interested in bushcraft do not know that much. Nothing to be ashamed of, as raw, wild nature does not exist in UK.
I did one course with Mears' people, and was pretty disappointed in them.
I hope you Brits do not get too upset, sorry about that!
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