hi nick
glad to see that there are other bushcraft campers out there. when we go camping my wife and 2year old we try to cook on wood as much as possible we use a OZ PIG on sites that dont allow campfires.
sill learning forging. campsite reading BUSHCRAFT MAGAZINE and a survial manual.
campsite entertament watching GLAMPERS
be glad when the receasion over and they all clear off back to spain!
I did a lot of what they now call "bushcraft" camping when I was a scout (about 50 years ago) we called it backwoodsmanship in those days. I still have the occasional forage into the woods to keep my skills alive
------------- hawk
"Laugh and the world laughs with you, snore and you sleep alone"
I have the body of a greek god - its in my freezer
All my most memorable camping trips have been some kind of wild camping. Dartmoor near where I live is one of the few places where wild camping is allowed. Although in our favourite camping spot you have to take everything with you as every stick of firewood has been stripped bare and it's too bleak for bushes bearing fruit. You might find a trout in the stream if you're lucky (and certainly a hook and a piece of line takes up no space in a rucsac)
I am a keen bushcrafter and am always on the look out for places to go I do a bit of foraging and fire lighting with out matches or a lighter as well as tarp and hamock camping is next on the agenda