I've just come across a site called "mountainvoices.org" that contains a series of interviews with people from mountain communities around the world, where they're asked about life in their village and how it's changed, but also given a chance to voice concerns of their own.
I've been giving some serious thought to using my big wedge of free time this coming winter to going on some kind of 'expedidition', perhaps staying in a Chinese village and trying to learn some of the traditional skills that they still use. This site made me think that it could be interesting to do something like this in an organised way, interview people, ask lots of questions, take lots of pictures and record the answers. I think that seeing some bushcraft skills done in a different way, and a little more '3-dimensionally' than in a traditional book's pencil drawings could show people which things are done the same everywhere. Seeing how people do things differently might be enlightening, too. There are plenty of places that are relatively untouched, so I should be able to find one. Then I could go and stay there for a while, observe things, and learn whatever I could. A book like that would be interesting to write and to read. I was thinking it could look like this:
Outline of the village, history, people, religion, customs, geography, etc.
Details on their lifestyle, how it's different from in the uk, and what traditional skills they use
Detailed explanation of said skills with lots of shiny pictures.
Maybe I could spend a day or two watching each household going about their daily life.
Soooooooooo...
What would you ask them?
What would you want to see them do?
Has this been done before?
I've been giving some serious thought to using my big wedge of free time this coming winter to going on some kind of 'expedidition', perhaps staying in a Chinese village and trying to learn some of the traditional skills that they still use. This site made me think that it could be interesting to do something like this in an organised way, interview people, ask lots of questions, take lots of pictures and record the answers. I think that seeing some bushcraft skills done in a different way, and a little more '3-dimensionally' than in a traditional book's pencil drawings could show people which things are done the same everywhere. Seeing how people do things differently might be enlightening, too. There are plenty of places that are relatively untouched, so I should be able to find one. Then I could go and stay there for a while, observe things, and learn whatever I could. A book like that would be interesting to write and to read. I was thinking it could look like this:
Outline of the village, history, people, religion, customs, geography, etc.
Details on their lifestyle, how it's different from in the uk, and what traditional skills they use
Detailed explanation of said skills with lots of shiny pictures.
Maybe I could spend a day or two watching each household going about their daily life.
Soooooooooo...
What would you ask them?
What would you want to see them do?
Has this been done before?