Learning to tune into the natural environment and see clues which can get you navigate is a wonderful, and vast, skillset. A skillset which will open your senses, and connect you with the land you’re travelling through. Don’t get me wrong, I advocate the use of a map and compass as you would expect, and we run a suite of navigation courses to develop those techniques. But often having your nose in a map, literally and figuratively, can distance you from the actual terrain through which you’re traversing, and it’s very likely the whole reason you’re outdoors is to ‘be’ with the land.
Natural way marks and guideposts then can be a visceral way to engage with the journey you’re on. The field is expansive, nuanced, and subjective. It can therefore feel overwhelming and off-putting when compared to the simple compass and map. A great place to start are the richly detailed books of Tristan Gooley, which are still a source of research and inspiration to me several years after first reading them. The Natural Navigator was the first book of Tristans I read, I think over 7 years ago now, and I must say I pick it up about once a month now for one reason or another.
If we’re just starting out then, it can be great to just let our eyes stray a little from the trail and observe some natural features and ask the simple question, why? Why does X look like that? Could I infer any information from this?
Here are 3 simple observations to whet your stone, and start that slow irreversible process of sharpening your skills.
I hope you enjoyed this article, and I hope you find it useful in your journeys.
If you’d like to join us on a natural navigation day course, you can find out more here…
Do check out Tristans books and resources too, you’ll never go on a walk in the same way again.