Glamorgan Gazette

Britain is the best nursery ground for your adventures

As he releases a new book LIZ CONNOR speaks to adventurer Ray Mears about the joys of downing our smartphone­s and embracing nature ... right here in the UK

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HE’S the TV bushcraft expert who has travelled to some of the wildest regions of the planet – from the tropical lushness of the Amazon rainforest to the chilly wilds of the Arctic – but Ray Mears says his favourite place to ramble is still right here in Britain.

“We have the most beautiful island,” says the 57-year-old. “I can’t think of anywhere that’s as diverse in such a small space. It’s the best nursery ground for adventure.

“It’s funny as I’ve met people on my travels whose only view of Britain is from watching EastEnders, and that gives you such a false picture of it,” he continues.

His latest book, We Are Nature: How To Reconnect With The Wild, is very timely. It explores the idea of returning to nature by reconnecti­ng with your local area, while learning to rely on your senses rather than gadgets and technology.

“My work has always been about connecting people with nature. One of the things that really interests me as a concept is that we need to rewild people as much as the landscape,” explains Ray.

As a species, we’ve disrupted landscape for agricultur­e, destroyed forested areas, and hunted animals to extinction. Many rewilding initiative­s are designed to conserve habitats and reintroduc­e keystone species, like wolves and beavers, to help rebalance ecosystems and boost biodiversi­ty.

“Our primitive senses are still there, but never before have we been more distracted with so many gadgets and toys. Social media is all about stealing our time,” notes Ray.

“That gets in the way of our discovery and developmen­t of these capabiliti­es, to our detriment. The thing that concerns me is that someone could live their whole life and never have discovered their sensory capability.”

As well as sharing detailed anecdotes from his incredible encounters with the natural world, the book also features practical advice on how to prepare for an adventure in the wilderness, plus tips on how to stay safe if things go wrong.

“Unless you’re going to be camping, you don’t need very much,” explains Ray, who is famous for his hit TV series Extreme Survival and Ray Mears Goes Walkabout. “Arguably the most important thing is a warm jacket.

“That’s one of the joys of getting into nature - you don’t have to invest a lot of money in equipment. I like that simplicity; it’s spirituall­y liberating.”

Ray says he’s always looked at nature and wildlife as the ‘teachers’.

“When you follow an animal, you go on a road of learning. I remember vividly following the octopus,” he recalls, and in the book describes tracking the soft-bodied molluscs in the Red Sea off the coast of Egypt, being mesmerised by its ability to adapt through colour-changing camouflage.

“You never forget these experience­s. They’re seared into my memory very deeply. You can forget things you’ve watched on TV, but you can’t easily forget the things you’ve witnessed with your own eyes.”

While few of us have had the opportunit­y to travel this year, Ray believes many of us have found ourselves being more adventurou­s.

“A lot of people have discovered nature locally during lockdown,” he notes. “That’s really encouragin­g, as perhaps they’ll now look more widely for those experience­s. I hope so, as conservati­on is very much bound up with people visiting nature and experienci­ng it.”

He also hopes the slowing down of life during lockdown will change our attitudes towards what he calls the ‘beleaguere­d greenbelt’.

“The green spaces in our cities and parks have never been more valued than they were this year,” he says. “It’s been a reminder of how important having green spaces for mental wellbeing are.”

During lockdown Ray has been writing at home in Sussex, and while he’s enjoyed putting down his passport for a while, he says he’s missing real life interactio­n.

“I like meeting people, hearing their stories and the questions they ask. Television is a great way to communicat­e to a lot of people, but it doesn’t beat actually talking face to face.

“Normally I spend about a month every year in Lapland teaching Arctic skills, so I really missed being in the Boreal Forest on a pair of skis this year.

“The extreme cold tightens your skin and mind which is great – it’s strange, some of the things you miss.

“But I was just in Australia before lockdown, in the aftermath of the bushfires on Kangaroo Island, so I’ve done a lot of travelling and it’s been nice to put my feet up.”

Bushcraft has had a massive revival in recent years, with millennial­s discoverin­g the joys of fire starting and tin-can bread making. Ray, who has been on our screens since 1994, is arguably the godfather of the scene, so how does he feel about the younger generation getting in on the act?

“It’s great,” he says, “but this is not new. When I first started teaching, young people who had scrimped and saved were finding an old Land

Rover in a barn, fixing it, and off they went. I think every generation feels they’re the pioneers, and they’re not, but it’s good they feel it.

“Mostly people go on adventures that are organised for them now. I don’t want to sound like a grumpy old man, but you have to have a rationale to go on an adventure. “People get high on the concept of adventure and forget that the best ones come along from asking questions and having a purpose.

“I do wonder about the type of adventures people have now,” he continues. “I think social media has meant that people like to take inspiring selfies that don’t tell the truth behind the photograph.

“You can take a picture that looks as though it’s at great height, but actually, you might only be a few feet off the ground. It’s very easy to be beguiled by social media – I don’t do selfies.

“I can’t stand social media,” he says. “Our life is the most precious gift we have from nature. I certainly don’t want to waste it.”

Social media has meant people like to take inspiring selfies that don’t tell the whole truth behind the photograph Ray Mears on why he doesn’t take selfies

■ We Are Nature: How to Reconnect With The Wild by Ray Mears is published by Ebury Press, priced £20. Available now

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 ??  ?? Ray much further afield in Australia
Ray much further afield in Australia
 ??  ?? Ray goes back to basics in Britain
Ray goes back to basics in Britain

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