{"version":"1.0","provider_name":"Rainbow Dash Network","provider_url":"http:\/\/rainbowdash.net\/","type":"link","title":"Sean (seanthebluesheep)'s status on Tuesday, 04-Oct-11 20:36:17 UTC","author_name":"Sean (seanthebluesheep)","author_url":"http:\/\/rainbowdash.net\/seanthebluesheep","url":"http:\/\/rainbowdash.net\/notice\/588473","html":"Anypony care to proofread this? - Every summer since I was seven years old save one year, I have gone camping for two weeks with an organisation that specialises in removing city kids from their comfort zones and putting them in a field with no technology and making them work. I thoroughly enjoy Forest School Camps (<a href=\"http:\/\/www.fsc.org.uk\/\" title=\"http:\/\/www.fsc.org.uk\/\" rel=\"nofollow external\">www.fsc.org.uk<\/a> though more useful information will probably be found at <a href=\"http:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Forest_School_Camps\" title=\"http:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Forest_School_Camps\" rel=\"nofollow external\">http:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Forest_School_Camps<\/a> ) Tasks done on FSC include chopping and sawing wood, preparing food for a camp of roughly one hundred people, lighting fires from gathered firewood, putting up and striking tents and in the middle of the camp, a four day hike. All of these require a level head and a moderate amount of common sense, and as camps usually take place in high rainfall areas at the height of the British summer, a tolerance for uncomfortable conditions and the ability to shrug something off and keep working rather than whining that it is either too wet or too hot."}