Ben Coley, Head Instructor at EcoTraining's Karongwe camp describes how spectacular a life in the bush can be.

The holistic effect of the bush is often
overlooked. People come to the
wilderness to tick off their marquis animals and get their certificate of
seeing the Big 5, but many will miss the true meaning of being lost in one of
the world’s most pristine wildernesses.
It is a place to find ourselves, to revisit the primitive nature of our
ancestors and experience what life used to be like before the advent of
technology. Undoubtedly our advances as
a species have opened up doors to new places and allowed us to enjoy a more
stress free life…or have they? Yes,
television and a comfy sofa sound like a great way to relax, but I can assure
you all that it is no substitute for sitting next to a serene waterhole,
watching the setting Sun‘s rays dance across the water. The colours that seep through the skeletal
winter trees cannot be put in words and I struggle to believe that even Dulux
could recreate some of them.
Our current crop of budding new field
guides was privy to experience such an evening last night. After a gentle walk from the camp, stopping
to discuss an old hyena den and tasting the moisture-rich roots of the aptly
named ‘Mother-in-Law’s Tongue’ we stumbled across an oasis. Stretching out before us was a small body of
water with no road access and thus protected from our own destructive
influences. The golden light of an
African evening filtered through the clouds, giving the whole scene a magical
hue: the trees seemed to radiate the light and shine it back at us like
something out of a fairy tale. Learning
about the fascinating organisms that inhabit this area is one thing, but there
is no substitute for just sitting quietly and contemplating life in such an
idyllic place.

This is what the bush is all about, and the
reason that so many of us come to the bush.
We are all looking for something.
Some find it in a bustling city full of social interaction and
technological advances. Others, like myself,
and many of the students who pass through EcoTraining’s welcoming doors need
only experience this solitude once and become addicted to this purity. The ‘real’ world can be fun, but only in
small doses. The bush gets under your
skin and for some, it will change their life, and their outlook on it, forever"

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