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The Outdoor Skillshare a success

The Outdoor Skillshare | 23.06.2010 15:28 | Climate Chaos | Ecology | Education

Over a hundred people came together last weekend for the Outdoor Skillshare. Held at Talamh Housing Coop in South Lanarkshire, the weekend aimed to bring people together to share the skills needed to occupy land and defend it from eviction. Workshops covered varied topics including cooking for the masses, digging tunnels, radio communication and climbing trees.

yummy vegan baking workshop
yummy vegan baking workshop

cooking for the masses workshop
cooking for the masses workshop

tripod workshop
tripod workshop


The weekend also had sessions on skill-sharing and running workshops to share the skills to facilitate participatory workshops. It is hopped that more skill-sharing and events of this type will happen across the UK in the future.

Lewis from Leeds who travelled up for the weekend said: “It was a really amazing event and I really learned a lot. I’d never put on a harness or cooked on a giant gas burner before so it was a great opportunity to practise these things. I really feel like all of us who came to this weekend will be able to go to a protest camp and actually chip in.”

Laura, part of the group that organised the event said: “We were surprised at the number of people who came and the atmosphere and peoples attitude was amazing. People organised spontaneous sessions and those of us giving workshops learned new ways of doing things. It was such a great weekend and I hope we get a chance to do it again.”

The temporary camp over looked the former site of the Mainshill Solidarity Camp, now a functioning open cast mine, and was surrounded by Broken Cross and Poniel open cast coal mines. South Lanarkshire has been blighted by open cast coal mines for decades and has also been a hive of resistance by the community and environmentalists. Over the weekend people from the local communities visited the event, including some local young people who took part in the kids climbing workshop.

The Outdoor Skillshare
- e-mail: outdoorskillshare [at] riseup.net
- Homepage: http://outdoorskillshare.noflag.org.uk

Comments

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quite concerned

25.06.2010 21:26

Had a look at the time table and the idea that you can train someone in SRT for climbing trees and tripods in a couple of hours in quite scary. Sure you can get people up and down and clipped in, but I doubt that leaves much time for anything else. Kind of essential if you consider that prelonged hanging around in a sit harness will lead to uncousiousness and death.

At a bare minimum you need to know reasonable anchor theory, swapping from ascend to descend is essential, what equipment to use and what equipment is not suitable, correct equipment limitations (ie understanding of fall factors on static setups), self rescue practice, using the italian hitch, an assisted rescue technique and some kind of hoisting technique since you're not bothering with helmets. I really doubt that can fit into 2 hours, and yet people probaby don't even realise why they would need to know it. Or will the police just come to the rescue when someones t-shirt or hair gets sucked into their descender?

I've seen plenty of bad stuff on the crags with people coming fresh out of indoor walls. I'm sure i'll see the same elsewhere now.

irata3