(2 November 2013, 19:38)Scythe13 Wrote: (2 November 2013, 19:35)Mortblanc Wrote: I have a Masters Degree in Pioneers/Cowboys and Indians (History/Cultural Resources Management) from the University of Tennessee and taught in the field for 35 years.
Does that count?
Yes. But do you think it has helped your ability to live with nature (damn that sounded very hippie-like) and helped your survival skills?
My degree required more than pure book work. I was required to complete a 6 month internship at an 18th century living history site, and to complete a practicum exercise where I trained a museum staff to operate at 18th century technology.
To complete that exercise I accomplished a Master Blacksmiths rating, allowing me to forge cutlery, make tools and recondition old tooling.
I was also required to make clothing suitable to rough wilderness use from head to toe.
I also became proficient at preserving food using pre-refrigeration/canning technology.
During that time I also built several black powder firearms from scratch, including the lock-work.
One of the hobbies that grew from those experiences was an activity we call "Historic Treking", where we enter the forest with nothing invented after a specific time, usually around 1780, and operate according to an 18th Century scenario.
So yes, I have woven cloth on a loom, sewed it into clothing, strapped on a knife and axe I forged myself, packed a rucksack I made with jerky and parched corn I planted, harvested/killed dried and preserved without modern technology, then picked up a gun I made with my own hands and entered the forest to live on only those items for as long as two months at a time.
Yep, it has helped my approach to survival a little bit.
As for "closeness to nature", that is mostly a crock anyway.
One can go camping and take all the conveniences available with them, sit in their RV and "enjoy nature".
Survival is doing your best not to become "one with nature"!
One spends their entire lifetime attempting to prevent their ashes from being scattered or their bones from being buried and becoming "one with nature".