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	<title>Fatgitwalking &#187; Books</title>
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	<description>On the road to UL backpacking</description>
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		<title>Wild Places &#8211; Robert Macfarlane</title>
		<link>http://www.fatgitwalking.com/2009/11/18/wild-places-robert-macfarlane/</link>
		<comments>http://www.fatgitwalking.com/2009/11/18/wild-places-robert-macfarlane/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Nov 2009 12:37:06 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Wild Places was given to me by a friend recently after a conversation about wild camping.

It describes the authors search for the untouched, wild places devoid of human influence. What started out as a look for the most remote places in GB, turned into the acceptance that Wilderness can be ...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Wild Places was given to me by a friend recently after a conversation about wild camping.<br />
<img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-69" title="macfarlane" src="http://www.fatgitwalking.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/macfarlane1.jpg" alt="macfarlane" width="128" height="195" /></p>
<p>It describes the authors search for the untouched, wild places devoid of human influence. What started out as a look for the most remote places in GB, turned into the acceptance that Wilderness can be found in many places, not just mountain tops, and that remoteness isn&#8217;t always necessary. As with most things to do with an experience, attitude and awareness play as big a part as does situation. He has described this in other examples of his writing as &#8220;ditch vision&#8221; &#8211; an ability to find the extraordinary in the rurally local.</p>
<p>What impressed me most about this book was the authors genuine desire to experience the places he hiked through and to. When I&#8217;m walking, I&#8217;m counting kilometers &#8211; am I going fast enough, will I make the destination in time for the train/bus, how much time do I have to stop and admire the view etc etc.</p>
<p>This guy does something totally different. I guess his style is UL as very often he talks about setting his bivy bag up in the shelter of a tree or a boulder, but the emphasis is always on the experience. &#8216;What is it like to bivy in a mountain in storm conditions&#8217; &#8211; not, &#8216;ok maybe there will be a storm and I can sit it out&#8217;, but &#8211; &#8216;I want to experience this impending storm so I&#8217;m night camping on the top to get the full feel!&#8217;</p>
<p>The mind is very often concerned with percpetion  &#8211; I know from my own experience as a photographer, that when I am photographing on the street, I am in a state of high concentration, I am &#8216;working&#8217; on the images I&#8217;m making. It is why I don&#8217;t carry a camera when I hike, I don&#8217;t want the intensity of the concentration on the image, I want to be &#8216;in the moment&#8217; of what is happening around me, without constantly constructing images in my head. Macfarlane however seems to get this focus on the experience. His intensity is a lesson in relearning how to connect with a wilderness experience regardless of where we are.</p>
<p>When I hike, I&#8217;m carrying my own little &#8216;wall&#8217; around me &#8211; thinking about how the pack feels, is the tent pitched right, distance/time travelled, clothing, food in the pack etc it is for this reason, I&#8217;m almost kicking myself for ordering a duomid rather than a tarp &#8211; as I&#8217;m just putting another set of doors around me. The tarp would stop that &#8211; maybe for warmer months!</p>
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