The Scotsman

Highlands ‘as good as jungles and deserts for learning wilderness survival lessons’

● Training here makes sense, says explorers’ charity

- @Brit_exploring By ILONA AMOS iamos@scotsman.com

An exploratio­n charity has chosen the mountains and glens of the Scottish Highlands over more exotic desert, jungle and polar locations overseas as a perfect destinatio­n for young adventurer­s to get their first taste of survival in the wilderness.

The British Exploring Society (BES), a youth developmen­t charity set up in 1932 by a member of Captain Scott’s final Antarctic expedition, is for the first time taking groups of young people to remote locations in the UK to learn outdoor skills, experience nature and build resilience.

Next year BES plans to take 160 youths aged between 16 and 24 to the Highlands on trips lasting up to 12 days.

A further 100 will go to customary destinatio­ns in the Indian Himalayas, Peruvian Amazon, Iceland and Finland.

Honor Wilson-fletcher, BES chief executive, insists many of the most powerful experience­s young people could hope for are available close to home.

“There is a kind of arms race in terms of appetite for ever more extraordin­ary experience­s,” she said.

“As the world shrinks, the sense of wilderness changes. The idea of contempora­ry expedition­s is not about pointing at things, shooting and stuffing them and bringing them back to the Natural History Museum.”

The expedition­s are made up of a mixture of young people from a range of background­s and ethnic origins, many of them from deprived areas and inner cities.

Ms Wilson-fletcher says wild camping in a remote part of Scotland offers many of the same experience­s, challenges and excitement you would expect to find in more farflung places abroad.

On top of worries about the carbon footprint involved in long-haul flights, she argues, the whole concept of remoteness has undergone a change.

“If your family history brings you together from 12 different parts of the globe, what is remote?” she said.

“We have had young peofrom

COMMENT

“We have had young people calling sheep a ‘cloud dog’. They have not cooked or eaten or peed outdoors, nor seen the night sky”

HONOR WILSON-FLETCHER,

Chief executive, British Exploring Society

ple calling sheep a ‘cloud dog’. They have not cooked or eaten or peed outdoors, nor seen the night sky.

“If you have never seen the dark before, you might struggle to get out of your tent.

“If you unzip the tent and there appears to be nothing there, then a road ten miles away is a meaningles­s concept.”

But she said anyone taking part in an expedition must do a digital detox and leave their mobile devices behind to truly get away from it all.

“Having your phone with you drags your front room, your work with you. That is not wilderness.”

The new expedition programme, UK Explorers, is being run in partnershi­p with Scottish charity Venture Trust, which specialise­s in developmen­t for people struggling with issues such as unemployme­nt, addiction, homelessne­ss and involvemen­t in the criminal justice system.

It offers participan­ts the chance to explore the natural world and learn practical skills expert leaders, expedition medics, scientists and adventure profession­als.

It aims to build character and develop confidence, resilience and teamwork.

Several well-known figures have taken part in BES expedition­s over the years, including author Roald Dahl, two-time Olympic gold medal-winning rower Alex Gregory, and Tori James, who in 2007 at the age of 25 became the youngest woman to climb Everest.

 ??  ?? 0 Wild camping in somewhere like Glencoe could be just as rewarding for young adventurer­s as some more far-flung destinatio­n – provided they leave their mobiles behind
0 Wild camping in somewhere like Glencoe could be just as rewarding for young adventurer­s as some more far-flung destinatio­n – provided they leave their mobiles behind

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