Stamp your outdoor man card
7 reasons why connecting with nature will make you feel awesome.

1 Fire!
Only one moment of manly epicness can be greater than effortlessly lighting a fire in the outdoors, and that is doing it when people are depending on you. With a few easily mastered skills you too can bask in the metaphorical — and literal — glow of this achievement.
Have you ever seen a collie dog meeting sheep for the first time? They know, deep down, that there is something tremendously important that they are supposed to do. They’re just not quite sure how to go about it.
A lot of the men I meet and work with in the outdoors are the same. They seem united by a need to claim a specific piece of ground, gather natural resources and use a variety of tools on them and then to make fire — with varying degrees of success.
But even when they’ve worked their way through all their matches and newspaper and are considering how to siphon petrol from the car, and even when their wives/ girlfriends/ kids are clearly becoming very impatient and bored they are never going to ask for help. It’s a guy thing.

2 Being your own man.
Could you survive alone in the wilds for 48 hours?
Of course you could. It’s actually quite simple; choose the right location, choose the right kit (we’ll come back to this) and set some realistic objectives like being happy, relaxing, cooking on a fire and drinking beer that you cooled in the stream.
Part of the difficulty men face in making a connection with nature is that they often associate it with the high octane, thrill seeking antics of Bear Grylls or the exotic locations and seemingly inexhaustible skill set of Ray Mears.
Would you seriously be a better man if you deliberately placed yourself in a situation where you actually had to drink your own piss? Similarly, would you feel that much readier to face the challenges of modern life throws at you if you had just spent nearly three weeks — alone — building a birch bark canoe? Neither would I.
Worse still, we often equate ability to function in nature and the outdoors with standards set on shows such as ‘Special Forces: Ultimate Hell Week’ ‘The Island’ or ‘I’m a Celebrity’. Finding our breaking point in the outdoors will teach us a lot about being cold, wet, hungry and exhausted (ask me how I know this) but it will never give us the self affirmation to return to work ready to kick Monday’s ass.
3 You could get started tomorrow
To get the benefit of time in nature you don’t need to be some sort of outdoor magician. Complex and time consuming techniques or those that require significantly depleting an area’s natural resources make for good Youtube videos but are potentially disastrous if the success of your nature experience depends on them.
If your intention is to spend a night out in the trees and enjoy the warmth of a campfire then don’t waste precious time trying to master the bow drill, the Hungarian Friction Triangle or the Bedouin Fire Blanket (I made those last two up by the way). Just take matches in a waterproof container. Similarly, don’t deplete yourself — and your surroundings — by hacking down large amounts of greenery to cover your shelter. Take a tarpaulin, it has more uses than a machete and you won’t get arrested for carrying it!

4 It costs practically nothing
If there’s one thing better than having the best kit money can buy it’s not having it and still being better than the guy who does.
You must have been there; out-skiing the smart arse whose jacket cost more than your entire holiday, lapping that sucker in the park with his Nike Apple watch or benching 20 lbs more than the guy who looks like he’s sponsored by Under Armour. Yep.
It’s the same deal out in the trees. You can assemble most of what you need from stuff you probably already own; a sleeping bag, a rucksack, a pan, some matches, a length of string. A saw, a hatchet and a tarpaulin are yours from B&Q for the price of a couple of cinema tickets. So when you’re watching your steak cooking hobo style over the embers spare a thought for the guy whose still trying to figure what he did with the missing pole of his £700.00 uberlite Sturmmeister bivvy pod. Here’s my basic kit.
5 Connecting with nature does NOT involve hugging trees
I get to meet many groups of young men whose destructive and antisocial behaviour in Scotland’s woodlands and green spaces causes a great deal of resentment and unease. It prompts many people to shake their heads and say ‘I just don’t get why they do it’.
I get it though because they, and all the the other men who come to these places are drawn there in the same way I am. It’s in our nature, it’s the environment we were designed and built for and when you’ve finally finished uploading your campfire pics to all your social media channels and done griping about your job to all your mates there’s going to come a moment when you are all just quietly watching the flames or the stars or listening to the wind in the trees. I believe that in that moment we’ve briefly ‘come home’. You don’t need to bare your soul or tearfully comment on the futility of life, you only have to be there.

6 You’ll be in good company
You don’t have to become some sort of solitary, bearded, smoke reeking latter day Grizzly Adams. In fact you might be surprised to know that green spaces and woodlands on the edge of Britain’s largest cities, are increasingly used by groups of professional, mainstream people who just want to briefly connect with the outdoors, camp out, blow the cobwebs off and hang with like minded folk.
Take a look at Alastair Humphries’ 5 til 9 Microadventures or Dave Cornthwaite’s Yes Tribe.
7 It will make you a better man
Stay with me on this one. Men are far more likely to abuse drugs and alcohol than women, they are three times more likely to take their own lives as women and for men, the path to treatment for mental illness is far more likely to start with their arrest. I believe that the most common reason for this is that for for most men discussing personal feelings is a sign of weakness — I was brought up on this idea myself.
But I also know, from first hand experience that, even for men who don’t want to talk, time spent in the natural environment can be restorative in ways that no spa hotel can offer. No amount of hours spent thrashing the treadmill can equal the elation of reaching the top of a mountain as the mist clears. No amount of ‘friends’ on Facebook will replace one solid companion in the wilderness and even the newest smartphone won’t feel better in your hand than a sharp old axe.









