Author Topic: How was your month for Free Range Naturism?  (Read 227017 times)

Davie

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Re: How was your month for Free Range Naturism?
« Reply #1410 on: February 02, 2024, 09:37:58 AM »
I ' had a good week. I spent an afternoon with friends from the local naturist walking group at Clover Spa which  is naturist. It just down the road from where I live. I managed a six mile walk yesterday with a short distance without clothes and tomorrow evening I'll be at Spectrum naturist swim.

Davie

Fellsnude

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Re: How was your month for Free Range Naturism?
« Reply #1411 on: March 02, 2024, 01:31:40 PM »
Well, I guess a zero report is better than no report at all. Last year in February we went to Lanzarote - must return before too long - but this year it was just the chilly and mostly damp Lake District with an arthritic hip, so no nude time. The hip is scheduled for replacement mid-March, and it will be a few weeks before I can freerange on the new one, but perhaps we'll get some back-yard sunshine in April. March is likely to be another zero.

jbeegoode

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Re: How was your month for Free Range Naturism?
« Reply #1412 on: March 03, 2024, 05:12:57 AM »
El Nino has brought extra warm weather between more days of rain. Looks like we may have another super bloom year. We're crossing fingers. The desert is carpeted with green plants like a lawn. Hillsides are showing beginning buds. Weeds are tall, and so huge that I've been harvesting and eating them along with my garden veggies. It looks like spring is arriving.

We got out three times to hike, one in the Tortolitas and two out west with an evening sauna. There is some wild country out there. We didn't get to the hot springs this month because it was freezing cold.

My neck/back laid me out for a week and then I had a week or more of covid. Then DF got something for several days, but we still got out there, and there is nothing better for flu and covid than laying naked in the warm sun. We are brown.
The sweat has been happening regularly each Sunday.

We're planning to get to the hotsprings this month, get out for the blooms, get out camping with friend first week of April, and I've been researching for a grand trip into southern Utah for camping backpacking, kayaking, car camping, hiking, slot canyons, mountains and lots of photography when it is warm enough.
Jbee
« Last Edit: March 03, 2024, 05:16:28 AM by jbeegoode »
Barefoot all over, all over.

nuduke

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Re: How was your month for Free Range Naturism?
« Reply #1413 on: March 05, 2024, 09:57:53 PM »

this year it was just the chilly and mostly damp Lake District with an arthritic hip, so no nude time. The hip is scheduled for replacement mid-March, and it will be a few weeks before I can freerange on the new one, but perhaps we'll get some back-yard sunshine in April. March is likely to be another zero.
Wishing you well for the operation, Fellsnude and maybe a few weeks later you'll break your duck with some nude time.  My advice if it's worth anything is - DO the physiotherapy obsessively and don't let up.  Those* that I've known that have been lazy have not recovered so well and those* that have stuck to the physio have done well and recovered mobility quicker.
(*=about 3 or 4 in total!)
John

nuduke

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Re: How was your month for Free Range Naturism?
« Reply #1414 on: March 05, 2024, 10:01:15 PM »
Weeds are tall, and so huge that I've been harvesting and eating them along with my garden veggies
Crumbs, Jbee - make sure you don't dine on hemlock, aconite, deadly nightshade and anything else poisonous!!
John

nuduke

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Re: How was your month for Free Range Naturism?
« Reply #1415 on: March 05, 2024, 10:09:46 PM »
Oh, yes, my FRN month...
Well, due to an unusual burst of warmer weather, I've been in the garden a little for this and that and then all the usual indoor nudity.  Not a spectacular month for FRN by any means, however.  Also, my problems with my foot restrict my walking range severely.  Getting some treatment next week which will hopefully improve matters and re-vivify walking.
Today, I took a little detour home from having my hair cut and discovered an area that was more agricultural and less populated than usual.  I pondered having a little excursion there in the warmer weather.  It was an area of very narrow roads indeed (not even room for 2 cars to pass in some places) so finding somewhere to stop was an issue.  But there were field gates and margins occasionally. 
John

jbeegoode

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Re: How was your month for Free Range Naturism?
« Reply #1416 on: March 06, 2024, 08:13:58 AM »
Weeds are tall, and so huge that I've been harvesting and eating them along with my garden veggies
Crumbs, Jbee - make sure you don't dine on hemlock, aconite, deadly nightshade and anything else poisonous!!
John
Cheese weed is delicious steamed. It's very nutritious (More than spinach) in my morning smoothie and with 8 or ten other various greens. Very abundant this year and has provided a constant green bush cover to the otherwise less green winter dormant yard. I have added painted metal flowers to accent. The regular green veggies are out there with it.
Mustard greens make a great substitute for Dijon or mustard in recipes, but the bitter taste steamed and eaten straight up is just alright. I think it needs diluted. Very healthy however.
Dandelion has its goodness, but I need to find a way to consume more of it. than teas.
There is a purslaine that is good in summer. A little salty, but a tad here and there just a nibble when walking in the yard is fun and tasty.
Some spontaneous psychedelia mushrooms popped up out of some fertilizer/compost in my garden. A friend identified and ate them. I don't do such, quit that several decades ago. I've got sense enough to not be frivolous with my mushroom foraging.
I've planted mullein and love it as tea.
Our hunter gatherer ancestors and people around here, used to eat as many as 600 different foods each year. Diversity is very good for the microbiome and nutritionally dense when eating wild around the house foods. SAD Standard American Diet tends toward eating like only 15 kinds of veggies all year, if that. Just gotta be sure and conscientious when harvesting. I suspect that more of the "weeds"are healthy and beneficial than not. Then there are eating fresh herbs and spices, which are generally weeds, or say wild foods.
Remember those prickly pear tunas and saguaro fruits getting harvested by us in Tortolita. It can be fun. Those two are super for diabetes.
Jbee
Barefoot all over, all over.

Davie

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Re: How was your month for Free Range Naturism?
« Reply #1417 on: March 06, 2024, 09:18:43 AM »
I went fir an eight mile walk through the Warwickshire countryside yesterday. It was chilly to start with but warmed up during late morning  making naked walking a pleasure. Saw and tasted the first wild garlic of the year too. The only downside was the amount of soggy ground but again thus may have been an advantage as I saw no other walkers about.

Davie  8)

Safebare

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Re: How was your month for Free Range Naturism?
« Reply #1418 on: March 25, 2024, 08:11:48 PM »
2024 has been a busy time for Safebare. I have been working with a burner group on an art project for the 'Big Burn' in Nevada. It's actually a collaborative effort among 5 cities in Texas, Houston, Dallas, San Antonio, Austin and Corpus Christi.

Each community is building a ~25' tower to represent the community. Houston, being the 'Space City,' will have the earth tucked away inside a flower with a sun overhead. Each art piece will have power provided by a playground merry-go-round that will be the centerpiece of the project.  The flower opens under that power to reveal the earth.

We have had a few local burner events so far this year and have been able to showcase the project.  I attended 2 of the events, including a Tree Burn where we torched approximately 600 Christmas trees.  Even though the weather was not entirely cooperative, getting naked during the burn wasn't an issue at all.

The second burn I attended was early March called Bliss Side.  As happened last year, a cold front blew in the night of the first day which ultimately limited my naked time to set up and GTFO ('get the f out'). I was on-duty for the effigy burn on Saturday night and therefore kept my kilt on. Other than that I did get to spend quite a bit of time during set up socializing with other burners, some clothesfree, talking about Free Range Naturism and other resources for nudist/naturist information.

I hosted 2 sweats in January, one for the burners and the other for the nudist group. Both were less than stellar, but that may just be my higher expectations. The groups were inexperienced in the sweat experience and I tried too hard to let it evolve instead of setting an agenda. Some bailed out as soon as the steam rose to an acceptible level, opening the entrance and allowing the cold in and hot out.  I also only had concrete garden rocks, not actual mineral rocks, but they did provide plenty of steam when I got the size and quantity down. The burner group seemed to be better equipped to enjoy the attempt, while the nudists only wanted to be naked while socializing around the fire. I may want to bite the bullet and build an actual steamroom instead of my feable attempts at a temporary sweat structure (tent).

I also have spent considerable time getting ready for the Art Car Parade to be held 13 April. I have been helping a friend with his entry that includes a robot in the back of my truck and several performers that tag along in a trailer behind the truck. We won 3rd place in 2022, which was my first year participating. My participation in 2022 - 2023 was mostly driving, whereas this year I have put a lot of effort into beefing up the robot and adding decorations to the truck/trailer.  The robot will exceed 13ft tall with flailing arms and smoke coming from his mouth along with an amplified voice track.  The performers this year will all have robot costumes, myself, I cannot see driving while in a robot costume, so I will be dressed/made up as an android.

Of course, the Art Car Parade includes no nudity.  But I plan to change that in 2025. Not by adding more nudity, but entering an art car that represents the nudist/naturist communities.  I will provide more details in a post in another, more appropriate topic stream.

~Safebare


nuduke

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Re: How was your month for Free Range Naturism?
« Reply #1419 on: April 04, 2024, 11:23:42 PM »
Wow, busy and eventful time, Safebare!  Good luck with the naturism promoting car.
John

jbeegoode

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Re: How was your month for Free Range Naturism?
« Reply #1420 on: April 06, 2024, 12:33:44 AM »
One of the late night shows went through recordings of news shows that said, "Wow, I can't believe that it's April first already."
They must have had twenty, or more.

Weather has been lie three days rainy/coldish then four days, or so extra warm. I've had some great days this month. Sweats each day. Managed to do four at the hotsprings, mostly naked except nights away from the fires and hot water.

Did a hike to Redington Pass. Weird, grandparents with three kids, up to probably 8th grade, encountered us on the trail down that complained that we were hiking nude. Very insulting. There are warning signs about nudes there, been walking on that spot for 40 years and never... The kids were hiding their eyes with their hands...very insulting. Come to find out that grandpa was most likely doing a trick on them. Fun after that.

A sweat each Sunday, one Thursday was women only. I've been nude in house and in the garden depending on weather. A private 1/3 acre to roam.
Been planning a three or four week open ended road trip, camping, hiking thing in Utah for the summer.

Spent that last three days nude in and around Ironwood Forest National Monument, but that was April. Spring has sprung!
Jbee
Barefoot all over, all over.

Davie

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Re: How was your month for Free Range Naturism?
« Reply #1421 on: April 06, 2024, 10:11:38 AM »
I went out for a walk for the first time for a month on Thursday  after what seems like incessant rain. The ground was waterlogged in places but passable. It was cloudy with some sunny breaks and mild so doing some of the walk naked was a joy.

Davie  8)
« Last Edit: April 06, 2024, 02:43:33 PM by Davie »

Fellsnude

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Re: How was your month for Free Range Naturism?
« Reply #1422 on: April 06, 2024, 07:11:00 PM »
No nudity in the cold, wet North of England in March! But I had the right hip replaced 3 weeks ago and the surgeon says I've made 6 weeks' progress, so I hope to be able to enjoy the sun when it eventually arrives.

jbeegoode

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Re: How was your month for Free Range Naturism?
« Reply #1423 on: April 09, 2024, 06:56:41 AM »
Way to be resilient with the knee!
Jbee
Barefoot all over, all over.

Safebare

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Re: How was your month for Free Range Naturism?
« Reply #1424 on: April 10, 2024, 06:43:00 PM »
I wanted to report on our adventure this past Sunday - Monday, chasing the solar eclipse. My bestie and I didn't want to be caught up in all of the hoopla surrounding the celestial event, but also wanted to make an effort to experience it. Friends had booked weekend events, for big bucks, that ended up disasters due to weather forecasts, poor event planning, etc. Everywhere I checked wanted 3 day minimum stay and usually at 300+% rates.

I found a HipCamp location that often hosts festivals and other events. They also book primitive campsites for $35/night. They weren't in the zone of totality, but near it, so I booked Sunday night thinking we could navigate into the "zone" on Monday. I had my eye on Hippie Hollow. I was surprised that I was the first to book a camp site, but took that as a positive sign.

All packed and headed out, Sharon in a sundress and me in an unfastened kilt, expecting the worst traffic outside of a storm evacuation. Traffic was no worse than normal and we made remarkable time getting to the camp. We arrived before any 'staff' was on site, but a phone call got us through the gate.  This is a exotic animal sanctuary and we saw many deer and antelope species that were quite unusual, as we followed instructions the "woods campsites." Tall wire fences lined the roadway and pastures. Every terrestrial animal observed was a quadruped, nothing appearing human on the 800+ acres.

We passed a large barn that appeared to be their mead brewery and other interesting structures, but no modern vehicles nor people about.  We arrived at a large clearing surrounded by woods of cedar and oak. The brush had been cleared to provide a park-like area for camping. Parking under the trees, we decided on a spot to spend the night. Stepping out of the truck wearing only flipflops, we set up our camp. The understory had only recently been cleared, so there was plenty of forest debris throughout the area. I would have appreciated a rake for clearing the area under the tent, but we made due by removing sharp or cumbersome materials before spreading the tarp.

We were very happy to find no poison ivy or oak, and very few ants or other vermin. We did wish we'd brought a fly swatter, but they were thankfully, not biting flies. Plenty of birds flying through the trees, but none of the exotic species we spotted on the way in. Sharon did spot a coyote the following morning. The weather was perfect, mid 70's, with full cloud cover, but no rain predicted until mid-morning.

HipCamp had been very plain in their requirement that no fires were allowed. This didn't fit with other information I had on the place, so I had placed a call a couple days prior to departure. They did concede to allowing a fire as long as proper campfire safety was followed.

I have noticed that JBee usually used portable camp stoves for cooking and rarely had a camp fire. I assume that is because of the dry desert conditions that he frequents. Me, not so much. I actually have a propane stove. I cannot remember ever using it to cook, always having a fire available.

Campfires and campfire cooking are staples of my camping experience. This trip was no different. We enjoyed roasted potatoes (a bit over roasted!) and marinated chicken. Yummy!

We played dominos until the darkness fell and gradually fell into sleep mode. We did put up the rain fly, more to limit the morning dew than any threat of rain.  After a wonderfully quiet sleep, the alarm in my head told me that it was nearing dawn. It was unusually dark in the woods, under a dense cloud cover. But I was able to see well enough to get the fire going and coffee brewing.

As daylight broke, Sharon joined me to discuss how much we must plan a return trip to this place and plans for the day. We had preparations for a camp breakfast, but opted for wonderfully deviled eggs accompanied by bread and fruit. We were still the only humans there. An old farm cabin was far across the large clearing, where we observed a car come and go. I also observed a 4X4 pass by through the trees, obviously the residents just checking on their guests, but no attempts were made to speak with us, I simply remained nude.

We broke camp and packed up. I threw a sarong on the driver's seat and we headed out around 10am. The gate had a door opener to open the departure gate, but signs insisted we wait to ensure the gate closed after crossing through. We certainly wouldn't want to allow any of the exotics to escape if we had left the gate open. Yeah, the gate did not close. I stopped and called the host's number to let them know of the predicament. They simply said hurriedly, "okay" and hung up. We waited a few minutes with the gate still open before I decided to see if hitting the opener or shaking the gate would help. I was aware of the camera pointed at the gate so promptly donned the sarong. Well, not so promptly. I had not placed the sarong on the seat with the intention of wearing it, so it was a bit of a kerfuffle getting it tied around my waist, but as soon as I had it affixed, the gate rattled closed.

I had my sights set on Hippie Hollow, and we had no trouble getting there, after about an hour's drive. There were numerous highway and park entry signs warning of the upcoming eclipse and it's impact on traffic.  The park was planning an early closure to make sure everyone was able to get out of the parking lot before gates had to close. I was planning for an early exit to stay ahead of traffic to my best ability.

Sharon had injured her hip preparing for our trip, so we weren't going to do any hiking around the park. We gathered snacks, beverages, a chair and umbrella, oh yeah, and the solar glasses (of course) and casually descended to the nearest observation spot. I followed my usual pattern of donning a sarong at the truck to comply with the "no nudity in the parking lot" and have something to sit upon on the rocks. It also works for a towel after swimming.

This park is clothing optional and usually has a lot of clothed people in this section of the park, but not on this day. Nudity was abundant in a wide variety of sizes, shapes, colors, etc. There was definitely an air of excitement not usually felt. Someone had brought a reflecting telescope and let anyone who happens by, the chance to view the spectacle.  There was more chatting among neighbors than on a normal day, creating a community feeling not usual to the social/political climate especially more recently found here in the Lone Star State.

The water level has been extremely low for several years now. The "Sometimes Islands" used to rarely appear off the HH shore, now they are one land mass stretching almost to the dam. The water was chilly to this Texas wuss, but I did venture in waist deep.

The eclipse did not disappoint. During the early stages, the clouds were high and translucent, but as the coverage exceeded 90%, lower, thicker clouds appeared. There were moments when we wondered if our luck was going to run out. But the clouds dispersed and blue skies took over the sky just in time.

The moon drifted in front of the sky for about an hour before totality, providing a gradual twilight, but when totality was reach, it came in an instant. Venus appeared nearby and lights appeared on the roadway as well as the Oasis Restaurant up the cliffs. The solar glasses were useless for viewing once in totality. Seeing the corona was as spectacular as everyone had said. What really impressed me were the 'beads' that would pop around the moon's shadow inside the corona. Bright spotlights shining through the mountains of the moon's surface.

As quickly as totality occurred, it ended. A switch flipped and it was twilight again. No more Venus and the lights again shut off. There was a point where the wind died completely, that I didn't notice until it returned. The only animals I noticed affected by the event, were the humans. Oh's, Ah's and applause that normally would accompany July 4th fireworks were loud and abundant.

We didn't wait too long as the moon moved past its pause over the sun to make our departure. Hobbling back to the truck for the trip home.  The trip took about twice the normal time, but moved along enough not to be too strenuous. It certainly helped to have good company. The final stretch was moving along at a good clip, when we decided to do one last traffic check.  Good thing because things turned nasty red and yellow for the next 20 - 30 miles. Luckily, I knew of the old highway route and made a quick detour.

With that, we were safely back home feeling blessed to have put forth the effort. Being able to experience such a masterpiece of nature, in the most natural state, was icing on the cake. Of the millions of people that went to brief or extreme lengths to view the eclipse, only a small number of us made a point to enjoy it naturally nude, barefoot all over.

~Safebare