ILUVSWTAS wrote:Only thing that makes you experienced is experience!! Sounds silly I know but it's true. You learn to read the terrain/conditions. The more you look at maps in the field the better you get at judging what certain shrubbery and map patterns will look like. The more your out there the more you learn. And as far as I am concerned it is a never ending lesson.
north-north-west wrote:It's not about how much you've done, but how much you've thought about what's happened and what you've learned from it.
Of course, the more you've done, the more learning opportunities you've had. You never know it all, so you never stop paying attention to what's going on and thinking about implications.
alliecat wrote:I think there is a difference between experienced and skilled. When we talk about an "experienced" walker we usually mean somebody who has a lot of skill. Sadly, it is possible for people to have a lot of experience (i.e. done a lot of bushwallking in general) but still be very lacking in the skills required for a particular situation. So skills matter more than experience in my opinion.
stu wrote:'Experienced' is a relative concept isn't it?
Someone who has done the OL track multiple times may be described as 'experienced' right?
My mother has done the OL track over 20 times & on that particular 'track' I would describe her as experienced;
johnat wrote:One can have 30 years of different experiences ... OR ... ONE year of experiences repeated 30 times. In my book, the former is "more" experienced that the latter.
They were Young, French and they Took advice Binder... c'mon...
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