Paradise

Born to be wild

Survival expert makes a PNG sojourn

- See wildsurviv­alskills.com.

“PNG’s grubs and other insects are delicious,” says US survival expert Tom McElroy, who recently visited New Britain to film a documentar­y series for the Discovery Channel.

McElroy rates the local bush tucker high on a menu that has also included monkey arm, tapir and parrot stew.

McElroy’s taste for such fare stems from years spent in the jungles of Sumba, West Papua, Costa Rica and the Amazon, among others.

“Indigenous people around the world have generously taught me skills passed down over 100,000 years,” he says. “I’ve learned how to walk into the woods, without even a knife, and make everything I need from nature.”

He says he was first inspired to “shed the restrictio­ns of society” by the writings of naturalist-philosophe­r John Muir, together with Jack Kerouac’s road tales of hopping freight trains and hitching around America.

“I saw survival skills as the key to freedom,” says McElroy.

He pursued that dream at the age of 18 with two friends by living off the land for a year in a large forest in southern New Jersey. The trio survived at first by eating plants and berries, then made their own bows to hunt rabbits and deer.

Looking back, McElroy admits it was not all a romantic adventure, but included periods of cold, hunger, feelings of isolation and squabbles amongst the group.

Neverthele­ss, McElroy was undaunted by the physical and mental challenges of life as a hunter-gatherer. He went on to study anthropolo­gy and sought out Native Americans to gain more traditiona­l knowledge.

Survival skills are a point of communicat­ion. If you can make fire with two sticks or hunt with a spear it shows you’re connected to the land and can be trusted.

“I found they were keen to pass on the ancient physical skills, to complement the current interest in the spiritual aspects of their culture,” he says.

For the past two decades, McElroy has travelled the world to learn from other indigenous groups by living with them.

“Particular­ly memorable was my time with the Huaorani, in the Amazon region of Ecuador,” he says. “The remote community was ‘discovered’ only in the 1960s by missionari­es who got killed for their troubles.”

As yet another outsider, McElroy overcame initial suspicion and gained acceptance through his ability to adapt to the local environmen­t. One way was to show he could fire curare-tipped darts from a blowgun alongside the best hunters.

“Despite their fierce reputation, the Huaorani are now peaceful,” he says. “However the 80-year-olds still talk openly about their violent past, saying they hadn’t been taught it was wrong to kill missionari­es.”

McElroy passes on his skills through Wild Survival – a school that runs courses for hunters, outdoor enthusiast­s and elite military groups such as SEAL Team Six.

Students learn skills such as how to start a fire, trap fish, use a stone axe, make a bark canteen, build a survival shelter or paddle to

safety in an animal-skin kayak. One popular course involves carving a longbow that will “bring down any animal on this continent”.

McElroy is also in demand as a consultant for Hollywood movies, which appropriat­ely include

The Hunted, as well as The Village, a thriller set in Pennsylvan­ia with Sigourney Weaver, William Hurt and Adrien Brody.

“Before shooting started, we wanted to teach the actors how to walk in the woods,” says McElroy. “As an awareness exercise we blindfolde­d them far from the camp and they had to find their way back safely, guided only by the sound of a drum. I was surprised how they really got into it and no-one peeked.”

McElroy featured in Trailblaze­rs, a Discovery Channel series of documentar­ies set in PNG, Bolivia and Ecuador. His role was to lead a team of scientists searching for new species around Bago in East New Britain and the Lake Hargy region of West New Britain – largely undisturbe­d areas of ..rainforest, considered to have significan­t biological value.

“I found the locals very welcoming

and used my time to get to know them,” he says. “Survival skills are a point of communicat­ion. If you can make fire with two sticks or hunt with a spear it shows you’re connected to the land and can be trusted. While the film crew were running around in high-tech jungle boots, I made a point of walking barefoot.” However, one high-tech aspect of the shoot struck a real chord. “We used a live feed from drones to show the forest from above. People crowded around the monitors, fascinated to see that overhead perspectiv­e of their environmen­t for the first time.”

Seeing McElroy’s respect for traditiona­l ways, local leaders in PNG have approached him to run survival courses as a way of sharing their culture and attracting eco-friendly tourism.

“Following the invitation, I’m planning excursions with my partner Blake Everson,” says McElroy. “Wild Survival has visited Fogomaiy’u, Telesu and Seane Falls in the Mount Bosavi area of the Southern Highlands. They’d be great places to start.”

According to McElroy, teaching survival skills encourages the next generation to see their culture as ‘cool’.

“I’ve found that young people renew their respect for traditiona­l knowledge when they see affluent visitors from the world of cellphones and computers seeking out the wisdom of village elders.

“They’re the real experts, not the people you see on TV.”

McElroy also believes survival living changes the way people approach their entire lives, because it helps them face challenges and reconnects them to the natural world.

“It’s more fun than playing with video games,” said one young boy in a children’s class.

That’s music to McElroy’s ears – played on a traditiona­l reed flute, of course.

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 ??  ?? Off the beaten track ...Tom McElroy with children in New Britain, where he went recently to film a documentar­y series for the Discovery Channel (right); bridge climb near Mount Bosavi in the Highlands of PNG (middle right); an eel meal laid out on...
Off the beaten track ...Tom McElroy with children in New Britain, where he went recently to film a documentar­y series for the Discovery Channel (right); bridge climb near Mount Bosavi in the Highlands of PNG (middle right); an eel meal laid out on...
 ??  ?? At one with the land ... a PNG hunter in camouflage at Mount Bosavi, in the Highlands.
At one with the land ... a PNG hunter in camouflage at Mount Bosavi, in the Highlands.
 ??  ?? Hunter- gatherer ... a participan­t in the Wild Survival course pitches in with villagers in the Highlands of PNG. The course teaches skills such as starting a fire, trapping fish and building a shelter.
Hunter- gatherer ... a participan­t in the Wild Survival course pitches in with villagers in the Highlands of PNG. The course teaches skills such as starting a fire, trapping fish and building a shelter.
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