I'm a partner in an environmental and design consultancy - part of our work involves undertaking field surveys, where we're tasked with surveying at the landscape scale, recording features such as field and hedgerow pattern, biodiversity, geological features, settlement pattern, etc, as part of what you call a 'Landscape Character Assessment' - basically identifying and recording the features that make one landscape distinct, or different, from another (what's known as 'sense of place'). The link to bushcraft is in the field survey itself (plenty of map work and yomping over hills 'n' valleys), combined with biodiversity work, involving species indentification, understanding habitats, etc.
Sounds bl**dy dull when I put it like this!! But it's certainly changed the way in which I 'see' the landscape around me, which in turn has helped my understanding of the landscape/environment, in terms of the inter-relationships between people and places.
Not exactly bushcraft ... but maybe bushcraft awareness??
G