B.C. said:I think Les Stroud is a fuckin pussy! lol The time he was in the canyons and those wild pickrels came around he went up the tree and did nothing! Those pigs are lil bitty fuckers. He could have easily stuck one witha long sharp pole from the safety of the tree he was hiding in, but he was too scared. If I were that hungry, say good night piggy! Btw in that same show, it showed him sitting there with the moon over his shoulder and the camera panned out, back in, and then focused on the moon. He clearly didn't do it, he was in the shot. What up with that ? Then there was the time he was in the jungle, staying in an old shelter of some sort? anyway, he thought he heard a jaguar I think it was, and took off running for the natives village. LOL Like that cat couldn't have caught his dumb ass, esp at night! Every time he talks about where he's goin in the intro he sounds like fuckin drama queen: blah blah blah where everything bites, sticks, or stings you! in his tough guy voice. LOL it jus kills me, I can't help it, he sounds like fuckin sissy! Besides he's not really surviving, he's waitin out his 7 days. Also, I really doubt he's goin without food that long too. That shit would be really hard on yer body ta be doin all the time. I have feeling the insurance company wouldn't allow it anyway. How would you ever know? Ahh well, later BC
yea i do the same i've seen every episode several times but my tv is always on the discovery channel, history channel, or national geographic. i don't watch anything else that often. unless it was the wire.ive watched every DC episode prolly 20 times....if thats on i watch.
... i dont care what else is on or how many times ive seen the episode....there is NOTHING better.
Wilderness Bushcraft encourages us to a much greater cultural tolerance and to notice more keenly our effect upon the world. We believe that this ancient outdoor knowledge is most important to our futures.
As realists, we do not hold to any restraining dogma, but accept the arrival of new technologies while tempering their use with more ancient wisdom. After all, who is the better prepared hiker - the one with the global positioning navigation device or the hiker who can use the new equipment but can also rely on their ability to read natures signs for direction? In truth, the older skills enhance the most up-to-date while the newer skills simply validate the knowhow of our ancestors.
As you will soon realise, bushcraft is the art of the possible.