Happy Pirate wrote:Actually after all my glib replies I got to thinking about past habits - not just "what is essential" but what would I not walk without? (and these are very different).
And for about 20 years the answer to this was 'my camera'!
As someone treating wilderness photography as more than a hobby I had become so accustomed to the wilderness experience requiring the filter of photographic perception, that to walk without a camera was like walking without eyes.
I couldn't see the point and often didn't bother if I couldn't 'lug the gear'.
It wasn't that I didn't love being out bush regardless but my camera was so much a part of my experience of wilderness that without it I felt diminished.
Then I went and did an ecology degree and realised how limited my vision had been anyway.
Then I went and got old and realised how age-limited my aspirations had been anyway.
Steve
Cheers
OK so this is a difficult Q to A but based on the above...
For years, for me, walking was defined as an opportunity to photograph. For others its just a fitness regime. Or just a social exercise ....
So this is a tough ask perhaps but what 'filters' or limits do you work within on walking trips and (even harder), what do you think you may possibly be missing?
The obvious one (So I'll pre-empt it here a little) is self-sufficiency - If we ain't eatin' the land we ain't knowin' it truly. (apologies to straw suckers everywhere for my cliched langyooage)
But what other behaviours within yourself or your experience of the bush can you perceive as limitations or filters to the true breadth and depth of experience?
So not so much "what don't you do in the bush" but "what experience are you missing out on because of what you do or how you perceive it?"
Tough Ask I know but looking forward to typical thoughtful answers here
cheers
Steve