• TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    Don’t forget the supply chain and logistical support required to keep people able to…lets call it “Living their best lives”…

    Lets just say that when people are going to be “Living their best lives” in the woods, often for weeks and months at a time, they don’t have time to work for money, they don’t have ready access to grocery stores or free stores. They need resources in terms of food, camping supplies, medical supply, boots, rain gear, and recreation and mental health. They also need rotation in that you really don’t want people “Living their best lives” indefinitely, you’re friends need time away from the work. No matter what they claim, they need time NOT “Living their best lives” to be most effective at “Living their best lives”.

    This means you need a multiple crews of 3-4 individuals that can rotate through 1-3 week intervals of “Living their best lives”. Don’t try and sustain campaigns “just for the sake of it”. Most of the work of “Living their best lives” isn’t actually out there in the woods “Living their best lives”, its the support network required to those small groups sustained.

    There is a great book about “Living their best lives” called The Last Stand, which goes into some loose detail about the timber wars of the 1980’s. It doesn’t cover the gory bits, but if you got a chance to visit the Emerald Triangle in the late 90’s, some of this work was still ongoing (even though it never made it to the news), and many of the surviving old timers were still around to be learned from.