mother earth provides for our NEEDS not our GREEDS
lol and wl charges you 700 quid for a week in the woods in sussex hope you can appreciate the irony of that
mother earth provides for our NEEDS not our GREEDS
lol and wl charges you 700 quid for a week in the woods in sussex hope you can appreciate the irony of that
mother earth provides for our NEEDS not our GREEDS
lol and wl charges you 700 quid for a week in the woods in sussex hope you can appreciate the irony of that
i am aware that i pay with my hard earned money for skills i cannot aquire on my own in a way that allows me to do things i would be unable to do in my local permission camping area.
beats spending £700 on something that doesnt interest me.
as mesquite said your point is?
You can spend twice that to sit on a beach and get fed as much rubbish as you want around a sterile pool and hospital like hotel surrounded by hundreds of ignorant people. Me, I'd rather spend the £700 and get some skills and experience in a british woodland by a world renowned company. I've yet to read a bad review of a Woodlore course, and I wouldn't swap the memories and skills gained from the ones I've been on for a lottery win.
Mother Earth provides for our needs, she hasn't left instructions on how to obtain them though.
hi, i'm a total newbie to this bushcraft business, i really want to learn, in a sense i always have since i first bought lofty wisemans sas survival guide, but to me, 700 is a lot of money.... however if it is something that i want to learn then surely it must be worth the money,i recently spent 450 on a 5 day plastering course which is now making me a lot of money,however how can i justify it to the missus as a hobby?
I'll be going. Just packing my kit, then unpacking, repacking, getting excited
Anyone done the course before? I did the fundamental a couple of years ago but I think this one is at a different location and was wondering if it's suitable for hammocks?
Cheers
Martin