sam
New Member
Really want to leave the rat race and live in the woods
Posts: 3
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Post by sam on Feb 18, 2016 21:33:10 GMT
Verry well put. kielder forest looks great we defiantly need to decide a time and date. Otherwise we will all never do it. ive always wanted to make something like this work but you don't know if you don't try. We would need to think about taking some seeds to maybe grow some food as well as going somewhere with a lot of recorces already available and plenty of game to hunt we would also need templorary shelter untill we have some built our own. Also how many people should we have join because the more people the easier building and hunting tasks are but the more people the more food we will need to get. there's still a lot of stuff we need to think about and plan for but I hope we can make it work.
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Post by keggsy1 on Feb 19, 2016 14:56:33 GMT
Verry well put. kielder forest looks great we defiantly need to decide a time and date. Otherwise we will all never do it. ive always wanted to make something like this work but you don't know if you don't try. We would need to think about taking some seeds to maybe grow some food as well as going somewhere with a lot of recorces already available and plenty of game to hunt we would also need templorary shelter untill we have some built our own. Also how many people should we have join because the more people the easier building and hunting tasks are but the more people the more food we will need to get. there's still a lot of stuff we need to think about and plan for but I hope we can make it work. Sam i think the less people the better as if it becomes to populated then what was the point of leaving society in the first place and its easier to forage and grow for less numbers. i know the workload may be harder with less people but that is what will keep us going and stop boredom,do you know what i mean? i think kielder is the best option as it has all the resources required for food and water supply.we also have to take into account that we may be moved on as we don't own land but again i don't want to be tied down to anything. i want to live off the land and be able to roam where i please. for shelter i know how to build huts etc. i have planned on going next month so anyone wanting to join let me know.
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Post by brokegrillz on Mar 1, 2016 11:37:34 GMT
i would also like to post my email here brokegrillz@gmail.com if anybody would like some company on a wild adventure as this forum seems to be a bit hit and miss.
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kev
New Member
gonna do this either way, if no one else does it i will do it in a more nomadic traveling style.
Posts: 9
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Post by kev on Jul 11, 2016 22:53:19 GMT
hmm, I cant do much lol XD I am very analytical though and can come up with good ideas at times, very thoughtful. i also train in kung fu which i been doing for like 5 years religiously which id try and continue to self train, learnt enough to carry on by myself in some capacity. and ofcourse camp security would be big thing, with the amount of things i researched it seems a lot of people wander around and go out of their way to slash peoples tents for no reason! haha need to stave off those guys
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Post by Fanny on Jan 28, 2021 12:54:01 GMT
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Post by Marylou on Sept 21, 2022 22:39:04 GMT
id="article-body" class="row" section="article-body" data-component="trackCWV">
When things aren't going Uber's way, the ridesharing company has no problem picking up its toys and taking them back home. It left Austin after the city decided fingerprinting and background checks weren't too onerous for drivers (and they're not), and now, Uber's leaving Hungary for tangentially related reasons.
As of July 24, the company will officially cease its operations in Hungary, Reuters reports. The ridesharing company claims its current user base stands at 1,200 drivers and about 160,000 riders in Budapest alone. The company hopes to return eventually, but for now, it's pulling up the rug.
The reasoning behind this move is simple -- Hungary's government is rather anti-ridesharing. Thanks in part to a powerful taxi lobby, a new law was passed that allows the country to block "illegal dispatcher services" over the internet, which includes Uber. Drivers caught working for Uber or similar offerings could lose their licenses for three years.
Uber did not immediately reply to a request for comment, but Uber's Central European manager told Reuters that the company has no choice in the matter. It's not a ban, but rather a "forced suspension."
Escort Körfez (thehub.hampshire.edu)
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Post by Concetta on Sept 28, 2022 6:32:49 GMT
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Post by Edison on Oct 2, 2022 2:34:10 GMT
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