Many of us go out seeking for some experience of wilderness,
though what makes up wilderness varies from person to person, you may dispute
this, but it all depends where you start. My dictionary states that the word is
derived from the middle English word wilderne
or wild place and what seems wild to
one may seem tame to another if your life experience takes in only large cities
you will not have to get too far outside of one to consider yourself in a wild
place. On the other hand some of us who have little use for life in large
cities consider ourselves in a wild place when entering one, as wilderness
is also defined as a large, confused mass or tangle of persons or things, there may be
some validity to that point of view. Like many what I define as wilderness is
those wild places where we like to roam, those places where you seldom see
others apart from those who you have chosen to travel with, places which are
not always easily or readily accessible.
I was recently reading a story where an experienced
wilderness traveller had taken a couple of kids paddling. The adventure took
place between a couple of large cities and was not what many would call a
wilderness experience at all but a simple day paddle , there was no remote
river involved, no camping, and dinner was in a restaurant on the way home. He
was chuckling to himself as the kids told the waitress about their wilderness adventure,
as many of us would. As I was thinking about this I could only see good here, these
kids had enjoyed a new experience in the outdoors that had left them thrilled
enough to share it with others. They had
an experience that that they would take with them as they moved forward in their
lives, hopefully it will lead to them seeking
more opportunities to see and experience
wilderness and maybe even a little of what many would see as true wilderness.
There may come a day at some point in the future when they laugh at this their first
experience of wilderness, but I hope none of us laugh out loud when we hear
these stories as the hope for preserving the wild places will one day be theirs
and others who may get started making those wilderness treks in their backyards.
For many of us it would likely be a great experience to when the opportunity
arises take some kids out to experience
the wilderness in their backyard, and maybe have the chance ourselves to get a
fresh perspective on our/their wilderness.
One last note as I wrote this I also looked at the meaning
of wild which was defined as living or
growing in its original, natural state; not domesticated or cultivated, taking
this to its literal extreme is there any real wilderness left? Is there any
place that has not been affected by man whether he has travelled there
previously or not, while you think about that and I hope you will, what it
really proves is that no matter how far you go to experience wilderness it is
in reality a state of mind.
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