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IdahoBackwoods
18-12-2008, 17:16
The most essential bushcraft skill does not involve making things. It does not require tools. It does not require special “kit.” It only requires the right outlook and the right habits of mind.

The most fundamental bush skill of all is the ability to see, hear, smell, and understand what is happening all around you, all of the time, as much as you possibly can. It's what the military calls “being in Condition Yellow.”

Vacationers in the bush today usually come from a noisy town or city, where they are accustomed to a constant din of background noise from crowds, traffic, coworkers, family members, neighbors, television, personal music systems, cellphones, and many other “advantages” of civilization. Arriving in the bush, these harried people bring with them their worries, city habits, and preconceptions about nature. And they are used to tuning out the noise.

They need to relax. Not just in the way that vacationers often try to relax, but relax COMPLETELY, in the sense of releasing not only their tensions but their preconceptions. They need to TUNE IN to nature.

The first thing to do in the bush is to walk very slowly, stopping often to silently look around and listen. Try to notice the signs of other animals on the ground, on the trees, in the air. Listen to all the sounds around you. Are the squirrels scolding somewhere ahead? Are the raptors circling and squawking and congregating? Can you hear animals moving? Do you smell them? What kind of animals? Do you see scat or tracks on the ground? What animal left it? Is it recent? Which way was the animal moving? If tracks, what do they indicate about the animal's activities?

In other words, the first thing to do in the bush is to size up the local bush residents, see what's going on at that moment in the immediate area. Then you can move on slowly and quietly another five or ten yards and stop again, looking and listening. Move like a deer: just a little at a time, always watching and listening.

If you learn to do this, you will eventually see many more animals and much more activity in nature than you were aware of before. It is a special skill, not to be learned in a weekend or even a whole summer. You must learn to look not for preconceived shapes and colors, but to look for things that look slightly “odd” or “different” or “out of place.” You often won't see a “deer,” but instead you will see an irregular patch of color that does NOT look like a tree or bush or grass. Is it part of a downed tree? Is it a rock? Stand completely still and be quiet, and watch it for a while. Was that an ear that twitched? Did it move? Watch. Listen. Smell.

Look ALL around, not just in the direction you are going. What's happening behind you? Look at everything. Listen to everything. Eventually, you'll get a sense for what looks normal, what sounds normal, and what smells normal.

Of course, you have to watch where you are stepping when hiking; you don't want to step in a hole or on a rock that will roll, or on a slippery wet log. But you have to be aware of everything else around you if you want to experience nature as it really is. Be sure to look over that log, and quietly around the next bend or over the top of the next hill.

There is, of course, a safety issue here. A hiker who stops frequently to look around and listen is much less likely to walk blithely around a bend to find himself between a cow moose and her calf, or over a hill to confront a bear and cubs. But the bigger goal is to experience nature as completely and deeply as possible, to have as many “moments of grace” as possible.

These habits are as useful in the city as they are in the bush. They are the same habits that make a person better at defensive driving or at anticipating a criminal attack. They are also the habits that allow a person to better appreciate the colorful kaleidoscope of human activities and the enjoyable variety of things that people do.

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Then there is the weather. When hiking or camping in new country, it takes a while to get used to the weather patterns – the signs that a storm is coming, the likely directions of wind during the night, and so on. But that's another story.

-IdahoBackwoods

Reddy
18-12-2008, 21:48
Brilliant post Idaho.

I loved the term:

"moments of grace"

Those few seconds or minutes that you completely blend, totally in tune, and as one with nature and your surroundings.

Priceless :)

Satan
18-12-2008, 21:56
When I go out, especially on my own, first thing I do is set up camp and then whilst waiting for my brew to boil just sit and look, listen, and "feel" my surroundings. I don't come from a large town but it takes me some time before "tuning in" to what's happening around me, might just be I'm getting old though.

Cairodel
18-12-2008, 22:42
The most fundamental bush skill of all is the ability to see, hear, smell, and understand what is happening all around you, all of the time, as much as you possibly can. It's what the military calls “being in Condition Yellow.”


These habits are as useful in the city as they are in the bush.

Oh yes, I hear you...!!!:supz:
So many times when we've been walking in the desert SWMBO's turned
and said, "Why have you stopped... what are you looking at...??".. :confused:
The sentiments are just as true in a city/town environment, and driving or
walking around Cairo, I'm in a permanent "Condition Yellow"... :rolleyes:

JP
18-12-2008, 22:47
4 words Common sence, Bush Sence, two different applications of the same thing, sence. If your practically minded resoursfull and have common sence your laughing ..

Cairodel
19-12-2008, 00:10
You're right JP, but I think you could sum the whole thing up with...
"Be Aware"....

dspain
19-12-2008, 14:32
Realy deep and inspiring post that one, really good to read.

Squidders
19-12-2008, 14:43
Brilliant post Idaho.

I loved the term:

"moments of grace"

Those few seconds or minutes that you completely blend, totally in tune, and as one with nature and your surroundings.

Priceless :)


usually the while taking a big poo in a hole you just dug up. ahhhhh.

Reddy
19-12-2008, 18:03
:butthead: :icon_tong

Pablo
19-12-2008, 18:05
Nice post. These are the fundemental principles of tracking as some of you know. Even before you look for tracks it's important to 'zone in' to your environment, establishing the base line and start heightening your senses and start using them in harmony with each other.
We live our lives at a thousand miles an hour and the natural world doesn't; so we miss so much if we don't slow down. It takes practice to get to that state quickly. Some people never do.
Many people don't realise that our presence has a knock on effect on the natural environment like ripples in a lake (how poetic). It's only when we reduce our presence mentally and physically and increase our senses do we start to see things we would never see when 'acting normally'.

Falcon
19-12-2008, 19:29
Paul Rezendez in The Wild Within ( he also wrote Tracking and the Art of Seeing) talks about bringing the perimeter of your sound within the perimeter of your vision. Very apt I thought....

IdahoBackwoods
19-12-2008, 20:12
Paul Rezendez in The Wild Within ( he also wrote Tracking and the Art of Seeing) talks about bringing the perimeter of your sound within the perimeter of your vision. Very apt I thought....


Thanks for mentioning it! I've read his first book, but I didn't know about The Wild Within.