http://www.offgridco.com/2018/01/28/wilderness-survival-school-training-video/
SImple ways of gathering edible plants, starting fires and making shelters are featured in this mini documentary on the Wilderness Awareness School in Washington State. Filmed by Alex Ansary in 2007.
Please follow this channel for more best of clips and new uploads. Please ALSO subscribe to youtube.com/alexansary. Check out alexansary.tv for additional videos, blogs and more.
▶️ DTube
▶️ IPFS
About the Wilderness Awareness School:
Wilderness Awareness School, a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization founded in 1983, is an internationally-recognized leader in outdoor education. Our mission is to help children and adults cultivate healthy relationships with nature, community and self. We are based in the foothills of the Cascade mountains about 45-minutes outside of Seattle, WA.
Through nature connection and cultural mentoring, we provide transformational experiences that awaken people's unique gifts, deepen their relationship with nature, and empower them to enrich the health of their communities. Our community of students includes people of all ages who understand and thrive on their connection to the natural world around us.
Wilderness Awareness School's adult education programs, Anake Outdoor School and Anake Leadership Program, are the gold standard for nature mentor training. Graduates of the two year nature connection program have founded schools around the world, become thought leaders and writers within the field, and are respected scientists and naturalists.
Our Summer Camp program is award-winning, having received Parent Map's best outdoor camp award seven years in a row. The Kamana Naturalist Training program, a self-study program you can do at your own pace and place, was written in large part by Jon Young, and is well-recognized for its thoughtful approach to connecting students with nature. And our educational philosophy, Coyote Mentoring, developed over the past 25 years and incorporated into educational environments around the world, was codified in the Coyote's Guide to Connecting with Nature, co-authored by Ellen Haas, Evan McGown, and Jon Young.
Founded by the late Ingwe (Norman Powell) and Jon Young, Wilderness Awareness School is recognized as one of the primary inspirations for the contemporary nature connection movement. Our founders have long been acknowledged for their thought leadership, and their philosophy is our guide as we continue to provide opportunities for children to discover the natural world around them, and for adults to explore, gain confidence in, and reconnect with the environment.
We continue to serve our community, in the Puget Sound, across the United States and around the world, by providing:
Fun, adventuresome, educational opportunities for children to explore the world around them, discover their passions, and build skills that will last them a lifetime
Transformational experiences for adults looking to reconnect with the natural world and re-discover their purpose in life
Naturalist, survival and primitive skills classes, in both self-study and physical class formats, designed to teach skills mastered by our ancestors and relevant enough not to be forgotten
Training for educators interested in mastering Coyote Mentoring, the widely-respected educational philosophy developed at Wilderness Awareness School, which encourages creative thinking rather than providing answers, helps students develop problem-solving skills and self-sufficiency, and encourages a much deeper level of learning
The community gathering place for people who share a passion for connecting with nature, providing forums, classes and facilitated gatherings that allow us to learn from one another, teach others and grow stronger in our efforts to connect more deeply to the world around us
Wilderness Awareness School is internationally recognized for its mentoring teaching style, its naturalist training expertise, and its focus on connecting students with nature, their community and themselves. Our wilderness education courses draw on traditions from indigenous cultures world-wide, emphasizing nature as teacher, routines to enhance awareness, storytelling, self-motivated learning, and tracking as an interpretive tool. Our approach trains youth and adults to blend the awareness of a native tracker with the knowledge of a wildlife biologist.
PO Box 219, PMB 137; Duvall, WA 98019
+1 (425) 788 1301