This is educational. Perhaps I either missed these messages along the way, didn’t care, or there is a lack of messaging.
Annually, one or two friends, along with myself, head off to the Boundary Waters. You pack it in and spend time fishing, transporting canoes, and camping. This is nothing like an apocalypse, but you have to figure stuff out. Dealing with weather, lack of fish, poor campsites, and insects.
Last year was much cooler and very wet and rainy. Again…you have to figure stuff out so you can sleep and not get wet. One definitely makes notes on what worked and how to make better choices for the next trip.
Surprisingly you need less stuff/things. You need the right tools and equipment over items you never got around to using. That’s why this year I’m going to practice kayaking, fishing, packing, and camping from where I live. Call it an adventure.
I probably should have linked to some of my pieces about the apocalypse, but thought it might seem a little redundant since I do talk about it a lot.
Your camping experience is a perfect example of the type of adaptability needed to carry you/us into the next phase of humanity. I always find it funny how people go on trips and vacations to experience what preindustrial folks experienced everyday: exposure to the elements, limited tools, etc. Basically, we need this type of living at scale.
https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2024/01/study-predicts-thousands-u-s-cities-will-be/
Saw that headline the other day. 2100 is super optimistic.
This is educational. Perhaps I either missed these messages along the way, didn’t care, or there is a lack of messaging.
Annually, one or two friends, along with myself, head off to the Boundary Waters. You pack it in and spend time fishing, transporting canoes, and camping. This is nothing like an apocalypse, but you have to figure stuff out. Dealing with weather, lack of fish, poor campsites, and insects.
Last year was much cooler and very wet and rainy. Again…you have to figure stuff out so you can sleep and not get wet. One definitely makes notes on what worked and how to make better choices for the next trip.
Surprisingly you need less stuff/things. You need the right tools and equipment over items you never got around to using. That’s why this year I’m going to practice kayaking, fishing, packing, and camping from where I live. Call it an adventure.
I probably should have linked to some of my pieces about the apocalypse, but thought it might seem a little redundant since I do talk about it a lot.
Your camping experience is a perfect example of the type of adaptability needed to carry you/us into the next phase of humanity. I always find it funny how people go on trips and vacations to experience what preindustrial folks experienced everyday: exposure to the elements, limited tools, etc. Basically, we need this type of living at scale.