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experiencelifemag.com
Print › | Back ›
Into the Wild
Build your outdoor survival skills - and reconnect with nature - on an
educational wilderness adventure.
By Laurel Kallenbach |
April 2009 |
Outside the Comfort Zone
Touching Nature
True Grit
Loving the Wilderness
Survival School Search
Resources
Sheri Webb moves stealthily through northern California’s Mount Shasta
Wilderness, taking care not to step on twigs or crackling leaves. She pauses
every few minutes to pick miner’s lettuce for food or to scrutinize a print on
the ground. Is it a deer trail? Will it lead to a spring where she can drink?
For 36 hours last spring, Webb and her boyfriend, Frank Sturniolo, made
themselves at home in this pristine forest, with only a knife, a flint, a
canteen and a cup. It was the culmination of a six-day outdoor survival course
called The Edge — a course that the outfitter, Lifesong Wilderness
Adventures, patterned after the TV series Man vs. Wild. Their goal: Survive
without the trappings of civilization. No cell phone, no Starbucks, no running
water. “When I hike, I normally tromp mindlessly through the woods,” admits
Webb, 32, a nurse from San Diego. “In the hospital ER, survival is about speed.
The Edge course slowed me down and taught me details like finding where clean
water trickles out of the ground.” After four days in a primitive tent camp
learning wilderness skills, their instructors left Webb and Sturniolo to fend
for themselves. The night temperature became Webb’s nemesis. “Even with a
roaring fire, one side of me always froze,” she recalls. “And we didn’t pile
enough pine needles in our bed to insulate us from the ground, so we were ice
cubes.” At 2 a.m., a shivering Webb yelled for help. “The instructors
didn’t come because they wanted me to feel cold, hunger and panic, so if I was
really lost, I’d know this was discomfort, not life or death,” she says. In the
end, she was grateful she stuck it out. “The experience was scary, but
empowering. It boosted my self-confidence outdoors.”
Outside the Comfort Zone
Wilderness skills courses are more popular than
ever, in part because of TV survival shows and films such as Into the Wild.
While most people won’t be marooned on a deserted island, many want to develop
the kinds of skills and courage needed to feel at home in the wild. “People
want to be more self-reliant and learn to find edible plants, read the weather,
track animals, and make their own tools and shelters,” says Tony Nester, the
director of Ancient Pathways, a desert survival school in Flagstaff, Ariz.
Embarking on a wilderness survival adventure is no laid-back vacation,
though. These demanding getaways teach skills that will keep you alive in
extreme conditions in the desert, the mountains or in 10 feet of snow. Courses
range from one-day outdoor classes that cover emergency preparedness to 28-day
simulations of a wilderness worst-case scenario. Some survival-trip outfitters
offer tent camping and prepared meals; others teach you to forage and sleep in
dirt-and-leaf beds. Some excursions involve moderate activity; others are so
physically and mentally grueling that they require a doctor’s permission.
When selecting a trip, take stock of your personal appetite for adventure,
and keep in mind that wilderness travel always carries a risk of injury or
death, even when monitored by experienced instructors.
Touching Nature
Why bother with old-fashioned survival skills like making
and using a bow-drill to start a fire when we have modern-day conveniences
(lighters, high-tech matches) at our fingertips? Tom Brown Jr., founder of
the legendary Tracker School, argues that discovering outdoor skills brings us
closer to nature — and ourselves. “Primitive wilderness training gives us the
knowledge to survive in any place with what we find in nature, and it gets us in
touch with our ancestral roots,” says Brown, who was taught by an Apache elder.
He passes on the wisdom to students who learn stalking, nature observation,
edible plant identification and Native American earth philosophy in his classes
in the New Jersey Pine Barrens and in Boulder Creek, Calif. “Tracking and
awareness open people’s minds and hearts to the wilderness — even the one in
your backyard,” Brown says. “People begin to read animal tracks like a book.
They see more wildlife and biosystems than ever before. They develop a
commitment to Mother Earth.” Without wilderness knowledge, we are aliens on
our own planet, Brown maintains. “If you’re lost, you’re like a scuba diver
without oxygen,” he says. By contrast, those who complete his workshops feel at
home in the bush, even without fancy gadgets. “Living off the land awakens the
adventure in people and inspires them to seek new horizons.”
True Grit
At age 27, Jimmy Ngo, a tech-support manager from Firestone,
Colo., was burned out. “I’d lose my temper when people complained their email
didn’t work,” he says. “I didn’t so much need a survival school as some
perspective.” He found both during the Boulder Outdoor Survival School’s
(BOSS’s) seven-day, ultrarigorous Field Course. During the two-day “impact”
phase in the dry Utah backcountry, Ngo and his group had no food or water other
than what they scavenged. They carried only a knife as they hiked 20 to 30 miles
in the heat, and they shivered from cold at night. “We didn’t find water for a
long time, and I was losing it,” he explains. “I silently cursed the instructors
because I wanted to quit. Then I thought, ‘Why am I blaming them? I willingly
put myself in this situation, and if I do quit, I’m still going to have to walk
out of here.’ Eventually I convinced myself I’d be OK if I just kept pushing
forward.” Ngo made it to the spot where a backpack with food, water, a poncho
and a wool blanket waited. The rest of the course involved rigorous hiking and
twice-daily oatmeal or grain meals, but now Ngo concentrated on mastering skills
that would ease the hardship he’d just experienced. Over the week, he lost 30
pounds from the physical effort (not an uncommon occurrence, according to BOSS
instructors), but he gained a new appreciation for his tenacity. “I was
humbled by how little I knew about keeping myself alive in a survival
situation,” Ngo admits. “Getting back to basics made me realize we don’t need a
lot of stuff in the wilderness to survive. I learned to focus on staying warm
and dry and on finding food and water.” Now, Ngo thinks he’s more patient —
especially with those pesky email problems. “The experience also taught me not
to overdo things: not to overeat, not to overcompensate, not to get upset
over little things,” he adds. In the years since, he’s enrolled in first-aid
training and completed other BOSS courses, including star
navigation. Why endure an ordeal like Ngo’s? “Fear
comes from not knowing,” says Jeff Sanders, BOSS’s Utah field director. “When
you freak out, things go badly. However, if experience teaches you that you can
live a long time without food — and some time without water — then you don’t
have to panic.”
Loving the Wilderness
The more you know about your place
in nature, the less gear you need to carry with you to be safe — and even
comfortable — in the wild. During his winter courses in Montana, Wilderness
Arts Institute educator David Cronenwett challenges students to start a fire in
10 minutes with just one match and foraged wood. They can warm their hands at
the group “backup” fire between trial runs. “It’s good to practice outdoor
skills in the field, not just in your yard where conditions are less extreme,”
he says. Ultimately, the goal of instructors like Cronenwett is to help
students respect nature, not fear it. Though a wilderness survival course might
seem to focus on lost-in-the-woods, “man vs. wild” scenarios, it actually
enhances the outdoor experience by helping you connect with nature, rather than
facing off against it. “The more you realize how much we humans depend on
the land and landscape around us, the more you come to see that people aren’t
separate from the rest of nature,” says Ancient Pathways’ Tony Nester. “We’re
all part of that whole.” Laurel Kallenbach is a freelance writer and
editor from Boulder, Colo. She is a regular contributor to Experience Life.
Survival School Search Whether you sail, hike or ski, you’ll enjoy nature
more by being prepared. When selecting a wilderness-skills course, consider
these factors: - Length and level of training. One- or two-day courses
offer an outdoor-preparedness overview, whereas longer courses (four days to
three weeks) delve deeper so you can hone real skills.
- Physical
challenge. At minimum, you must be able to hike a few miles a day with a
light pack. For rigorous or high-altitude trips, train in advance for
several months. Courses that simulate emergency hardships (hunger, thirst,
extreme temperatures) require physical and mental prep.
- Terrain and
conditions. Most courses teach skills that focus on deserts, mountains,
woodlands or extreme weather conditions. Consider a course that supports your
favorite activities (winter safety for skiers, summer survival for backpackers).
- Cost. Outfitters charge $100 to $200 per day. Budget for extras such
as a knife, compass or metal drinking container, but don’t count on a lot of
additional gear.
Resources
Check the Wilderness Drum Web site for a state-by-state list of outdoor
schools: www.wildernessdrum.com/html/survival_schools.html. Ancient
Pathways: Featuring orienteering, plant uses and desert survival in Arizona,
this school offers coed and women-only courses. 928-526-2552; www.apathways.com. Boulder Outdoor
Survival School (BOSS): Teaches survival skills during physically demanding
courses that range from one to 28 days in Utah, Colorado and Mexico.
303-444-9779; www.boss-inc.com. Lifesong Wilderness
Adventures: Offers survival and wilderness education camps for all experience
levels in remote California. 530-859-0539; www.lifesongadventures.com. Tracker
School: Wilderness expert Tom Brown Jr. shares his knowledge and philosophy
during multiday workshops in New Jersey and California. 609-242-0350; www.trackerschool.com. Wilderness
Arts Institute: Learn the basics of cold-weather survival during one- to
five-day courses in the Montana backcountry. 406-590-8070; www.wilderness-arts.com. National
Outdoor Leadership School (NOLS): This nonprofit wilderness education
organization leads courses around the world, from New Zealand to Baffin Island
in Canada. 800-710-6657; www.nols.edu. Tom Brown Jr. offers survival strategies for urban and suburban emergencies in
the Web Extra! at the top right of this page.
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Into the Wild
Build your outdoor survival skills - and reconnect with nature - on an
educational wilderness adventure.
By Laurel Kallenbach | Head Out Department, April 2009 |
Outside the Comfort Zone
Touching Nature
True Grit
Loving the Wilderness
Survival School Search
Resources
Sheri Webb moves stealthily through northern California’s Mount Shasta
Wilderness, taking care not to step on twigs or crackling leaves. She pauses
every few minutes to pick miner’s lettuce for food or to scrutinize a print on
the ground. Is it a deer trail? Will it lead to a spring where she can drink?
For 36 hours last spring, Webb and her boyfriend, Frank Sturniolo, made
themselves at home in this pristine forest, with only a knife, a flint, a
canteen and a cup. It was the culmination of a six-day outdoor survival course
called The Edge — a course that the outfitter, Lifesong Wilderness
Adventures, patterned after the TV series Man vs. Wild. Their goal: Survive
without the trappings of civilization. No cell phone, no Starbucks, no running
water. “When I hike, I normally tromp mindlessly through the woods,” admits
Webb, 32, a nurse from San Diego. “In the hospital ER, survival is about speed.
The Edge course slowed me down and taught me details like finding where clean
water trickles out of the ground.” After four days in a primitive tent camp
learning wilderness skills, their instructors left Webb and Sturniolo to fend
for themselves. The night temperature became Webb’s nemesis. “Even with a
roaring fire, one side of me always froze,” she recalls. “And we didn’t pile
enough pine needles in our bed to insulate us from the ground, so we were ice
cubes.” At 2 a.m., a shivering Webb yelled for help. “The instructors
didn’t come because they wanted me to feel cold, hunger and panic, so if I was
really lost, I’d know this was discomfort, not life or death,” she says. In the
end, she was grateful she stuck it out. “The experience was scary, but
empowering. It boosted my self-confidence outdoors.”
Outside the Comfort Zone (Back to Top)
Wilderness skills courses are more popular than
ever, in part because of TV survival shows and films such as Into the Wild.
While most people won’t be marooned on a deserted island, many want to develop
the kinds of skills and courage needed to feel at home in the wild. “People
want to be more self-reliant and learn to find edible plants, read the weather,
track animals, and make their own tools and shelters,” says Tony Nester, the
director of Ancient Pathways, a desert survival school in Flagstaff, Ariz.
Embarking on a wilderness survival adventure is no laid-back vacation,
though. These demanding getaways teach skills that will keep you alive in
extreme conditions in the desert, the mountains or in 10 feet of snow. Courses
range from one-day outdoor classes that cover emergency preparedness to 28-day
simulations of a wilderness worst-case scenario. Some survival-trip outfitters
offer tent camping and prepared meals; others teach you to forage and sleep in
dirt-and-leaf beds. Some excursions involve moderate activity; others are so
physically and mentally grueling that they require a doctor’s permission.
When selecting a trip, take stock of your personal appetite for adventure,
and keep in mind that wilderness travel always carries a risk of injury or
death, even when monitored by experienced instructors.
Touching Nature (Back to Top)
Why bother with old-fashioned survival skills like making
and using a bow-drill to start a fire when we have modern-day conveniences
(lighters, high-tech matches) at our fingertips? Tom Brown Jr., founder of
the legendary Tracker School, argues that discovering outdoor skills brings us
closer to nature — and ourselves. “Primitive wilderness training gives us the
knowledge to survive in any place with what we find in nature, and it gets us in
touch with our ancestral roots,” says Brown, who was taught by an Apache elder.
He passes on the wisdom to students who learn stalking, nature observation,
edible plant identification and Native American earth philosophy in his classes
in the New Jersey Pine Barrens and in Boulder Creek, Calif. “Tracking and
awareness open people’s minds and hearts to the wilderness — even the one in
your backyard,” Brown says. “People begin to read animal tracks like a book.
They see more wildlife and biosystems than ever before. They develop a
commitment to Mother Earth.” Without wilderness knowledge, we are aliens on
our own planet, Brown maintains. “If you’re lost, you’re like a scuba diver
without oxygen,” he says. By contrast, those who complete his workshops feel at
home in the bush, even without fancy gadgets. “Living off the land awakens the
adventure in people and inspires them to seek new horizons.”
True Grit (Back to Top)
At age 27, Jimmy Ngo, a tech-support manager from Firestone,
Colo., was burned out. “I’d lose my temper when people complained their email
didn’t work,” he says. “I didn’t so much need a survival school as some
perspective.” He found both during the Boulder Outdoor Survival School’s
(BOSS’s) seven-day, ultrarigorous Field Course. During the two-day “impact”
phase in the dry Utah backcountry, Ngo and his group had no food or water other
than what they scavenged. They carried only a knife as they hiked 20 to 30 miles
in the heat, and they shivered from cold at night. “We didn’t find water for a
long time, and I was losing it,” he explains. “I silently cursed the instructors
because I wanted to quit. Then I thought, ‘Why am I blaming them? I willingly
put myself in this situation, and if I do quit, I’m still going to have to walk
out of here.’ Eventually I convinced myself I’d be OK if I just kept pushing
forward.” Ngo made it to the spot where a backpack with food, water, a poncho
and a wool blanket waited. The rest of the course involved rigorous hiking and
twice-daily oatmeal or grain meals, but now Ngo concentrated on mastering skills
that would ease the hardship he’d just experienced. Over the week, he lost 30
pounds from the physical effort (not an uncommon occurrence, according to BOSS
instructors), but he gained a new appreciation for his tenacity. “I was
humbled by how little I knew about keeping myself alive in a survival
situation,” Ngo admits. “Getting back to basics made me realize we don’t need a
lot of stuff in the wilderness to survive. I learned to focus on staying warm
and dry and on finding food and water.” Now, Ngo thinks he’s more patient —
especially with those pesky email problems. “The experience also taught me not
to overdo things: not to overeat, not to overcompensate, not to get upset
over little things,” he adds. In the years since, he’s enrolled in first-aid
training and completed other BOSS courses, including star
navigation. Why endure an ordeal like Ngo’s? “Fear
comes from not knowing,” says Jeff Sanders, BOSS’s Utah field director. “When
you freak out, things go badly. However, if experience teaches you that you can
live a long time without food — and some time without water — then you don’t
have to panic.”
Loving the Wilderness (Back to Top)
The more you know about your place
in nature, the less gear you need to carry with you to be safe — and even
comfortable — in the wild. During his winter courses in Montana, Wilderness
Arts Institute educator David Cronenwett challenges students to start a fire in
10 minutes with just one match and foraged wood. They can warm their hands at
the group “backup” fire between trial runs. “It’s good to practice outdoor
skills in the field, not just in your yard where conditions are less extreme,”
he says. Ultimately, the goal of instructors like Cronenwett is to help
students respect nature, not fear it. Though a wilderness survival course might
seem to focus on lost-in-the-woods, “man vs. wild” scenarios, it actually
enhances the outdoor experience by helping you connect with nature, rather than
facing off against it. “The more you realize how much we humans depend on
the land and landscape around us, the more you come to see that people aren’t
separate from the rest of nature,” says Ancient Pathways’ Tony Nester. “We’re
all part of that whole.” Laurel Kallenbach is a freelance writer and
editor from Boulder, Colo. She is a regular contributor to Experience Life.
Survival School Search (Back to Top) Whether you sail, hike or ski, you’ll enjoy nature
more by being prepared. When selecting a wilderness-skills course, consider
these factors: - Length and level of training. One- or two-day courses
offer an outdoor-preparedness overview, whereas longer courses (four days to
three weeks) delve deeper so you can hone real skills.
- Physical
challenge. At minimum, you must be able to hike a few miles a day with a
light pack. For rigorous or high-altitude trips, train in advance for
several months. Courses that simulate emergency hardships (hunger, thirst,
extreme temperatures) require physical and mental prep.
- Terrain and
conditions. Most courses teach skills that focus on deserts, mountains,
woodlands or extreme weather conditions. Consider a course that supports your
favorite activities (winter safety for skiers, summer survival for backpackers).
- Cost. Outfitters charge $100 to $200 per day. Budget for extras such
as a knife, compass or metal drinking container, but don’t count on a lot of
additional gear.
Resources (Back to Top)
Check the Wilderness Drum Web site for a state-by-state list of outdoor
schools: www.wildernessdrum.com/html/survival_schools.html. Ancient
Pathways: Featuring orienteering, plant uses and desert survival in Arizona,
this school offers coed and women-only courses. 928-526-2552; www.apathways.com. Boulder Outdoor
Survival School (BOSS): Teaches survival skills during physically demanding
courses that range from one to 28 days in Utah, Colorado and Mexico.
303-444-9779; www.boss-inc.com. Lifesong Wilderness
Adventures: Offers survival and wilderness education camps for all experience
levels in remote California. 530-859-0539; www.lifesongadventures.com. Tracker
School: Wilderness expert Tom Brown Jr. shares his knowledge and philosophy
during multiday workshops in New Jersey and California. 609-242-0350; www.trackerschool.com. Wilderness
Arts Institute: Learn the basics of cold-weather survival during one- to
five-day courses in the Montana backcountry. 406-590-8070; www.wilderness-arts.com. National
Outdoor Leadership School (NOLS): This nonprofit wilderness education
organization leads courses around the world, from New Zealand to Baffin Island
in Canada. 800-710-6657; www.nols.edu. Tom Brown Jr. offers survival strategies for urban and suburban emergencies in
the Web Extra! at the top right of this page.
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