Outdoorsmanship
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- JackRyan0
Man if you guys haven't seen it...and are into this sort of thing. These DVDs are awesome.
Guy retired and lived in remote Alaskan wilderness...completely by himself. Planned to stay only a year, ended up staying out there for 30. Downed all of the trees, made his own cabin, tools..etc.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ric…
http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/on…
- canoe0
@bogue - Tell us more about this Tasmanian trek that almost took your life.
- sine0
i grew up trekking and camping around the country and Southern Africa with my dad and younger brother. so many great experiences.
i rock climbed quite intensely in my mid 20s; trained 3 times a week and then spent most of my weekends trying to send ever-more-difficult climbs.
i've also surfed for the last five years or so (late starter), but i've been so lazy the last year. trying to slowly get back in to it again. i did nearly kill myself in big surf a couple years ago, which killed the stoke for me for a while. i got myself into the water quite soon after the incident, but it's always stayed with me...
- canoe0
^ what about sea kayaking now since you're taking it easy
- UKV0
- MHDC0
- bogue0
@ Canoe : It was just weather that got the best of me. I had read plenty about how bad the weather off the southern ocean could get and how drastically things could change... but i still wasn't prepared. The only real mountain day i had in my trek (around a 3000 Meter elevation gain) the weather rolled in on me while I was 2/3rds of the way up the mountain and it just kicked my ass. 120km/h winds that would litterally knock me over every couple of minutes... terrential rain like i've never seen before. It was an 18km day that day and i just got absolutely soaked to the bone... all of my gear got absolutely soaked (tent, sleeping bag all dripping wet). I finally got to my stopping point at around 6pm at which point it started snowing. I was shaking and shivering so badly... i tried to sing some songs that i knew to test my speech to see if I was hypothermic... and i couldn't even speak.... slurring like a drunk. 30 minutes later this Aussie couple who had also got pounded by weather arrived in the same spot from a different direction and they wrapped me up in the reflective blanket, made me tea.. and got me going again.
Other than that the hike was amazing. Remote beaches that stretched for 40km's.. dense rainforest, buttongrass plains with mud up to your thighs for 10km stretches. And every day had some ridiculous challenge that was completely un-necessary after a 20km hike. Intense river crossing, Rowboats across an open stretch of ocean, having to climb up a waterfall, and my favourite: a rivulet crossing where you couldn't see the depth and had these raging tidal surges that shot back up the river and would suck you out to sea.
Not sure if i would ever try and pull something like that off alone again.... that was definitely a bad decision. But it was rewarding to complete.
- canoe0
Amazing!
- canoe0
Amazon just dropped off a guide to Everglades National Park, got to get there before the mosquitos.
Who's got plans this spring?
- chossy0
Walked most of the hills of Scotland, climbed lots. Ice climbing etc. lots of mountain biking. Used to canoe but it was shite. Taken up skiing and snowboarding now as well.
- canoe0
Any other books to recommend?