What bushcraft skills have you brought into your home or on property from your experiences in the great outdoors, /out/?
For me,
•Learning to field dress wild game then becoming proficient in field dressing farm animals.
•Learning to whittle around the campfire then being able to whittle to make things to sell on etsy.
•Learned to dry laundry without a dryer then always dry laundry on a line outside at home.
•Learning to baton firewood outdoors then using that skill in the kitchen.
•Learning what plants to forage for then using that to plant those plants in my garden.
>>1057948
>Learning to field dress wild game then becoming proficient in field dressing farm animals.
It'll become pretty boring and disgusting after your third pig or tenth chicken.
>Learning to whittle around the campfire then being able to whittle to make things to sell on etsy.
You whittle for your mental health, not for commerce. Also there are professionals working with wood, good luck with beating years of experience
>Learned to dry laundry without a dryer then always dry laundry on a line outside at home.
Okay, thats kinda something you should've known from everyday life
>Learning to baton firewood outdoors then using that skill in the kitchen.
Buy a small axe, ignore knife batoning shitposters.
>Learning what plants to forage for then using that to plant those plants in my garden.
A lot of wild plants grow only in the wild because of reasons, also good luck recognizing when to harvest plants at the correct time and then drying the seeds and then finding out when to plant the seeds in your garden and so on.
Its not that I disapprove of your plans, they just seem a bit idealistic for a newbie.
>bump