By Sean Fagan
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Fox Cubs & Prehistoric Cave Art...
What's the Connection?
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While walking late at night through a quiet, suburban street in Dublin city I came across a family of foxes. They were quite tame - and tolerated my wide-eyed admiration with a general air of indifference.
I watched the cubs skitter around playfully on a roadside green for over 20 minutes, being within about 4 metres of them (they often ventured closer).
Lithe and curious - the footfall of these playful, chasing cubs was eerily quiet.
They moved with such precision and grace - seemingly floating above the ground - while their sharp, flitting eyes and alert ears consumed everything around them.
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I consider it a privilege to be so near wild (non-dangerous!) animals - that wordless connection, which can bind humans with other animal species, borders on the unfathomable and powerful - even ancient.
Whether it’s a modern human, like myself, caught up in an inspired moment with playful foxes - or the beautiful, evocative paintings of wild animals so skillfully rendered upon cave walls by our prehistoric ancestors…
That deep-seated, instinctual admiration of animals by many humans seems to transcend time.
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I believe it’s within all of us – that admiration of other sentient beings.
To fully activate this often latent instinct, all that is usually required is exposure to nature, preferably sustained exposure.
It’s probably one of the most effective ways of getting people interested in cherishing and protecting wild places and the wonderful beings that dwell within these places.
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Bushcraft, bird watching, tracking, outdoor photography and hiking are just a few avenues of sustained nature-contact that can soothe, inspire & stimulate (even heal).
Nature can be many things to people, including a place of much-needed revitalization - as the great nature writer, Henry Beston, touches upon in the following quote...
“The world to-day is sick to its thin blood for lack of elemental things, for fire before the hands, for water welling from the earth, for air, for the dear earth itself underfoot".
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Related articles on this website:- Everett Ruess, a Wilderness Soul (reckless romantic or great wilderness soul?)
- The Woods of my Youth (my first encounter with nature & bushcraft)
- Bushcraft as Therapy (can bushcraft be a source of healing?)
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