Maybe that is the reason I am pulled towards it with a uncanny attraction. My birth connects me to nature, and it is the same with you. All of us have this subtle or explicit urge, this affection towards nature, but to understand it, one must first experience the magic of nature. Nature exists in the city too. But nature doesn't stay nature here. Rivers become sewage and the fresh morning air has
been locked in gas chambers. Life as we know it today, is just a race, to where? We don't know. We live in a society in which our basic instinct of a human being has been lost; where we cannot expect nature to be a priority. But what if you really, innately want to have an intimate affair with nature? Then you need to leave the concrete and go to the woods. Go to nature, and watch her grow, watch her bloom, watch her flower. You'll see how life takes birth, how it grows through complex surroundings, struggles and withers away. All this, you can do, with Wild Outdoors! Because, when you are with us, you'll understand how nature is bound to rules, how detailed it is. The rules are universal, no one is supposed to trespass them, undermine them. One might even pay dearly if he tries to oversee these rules and trespass nature's privacy. And when we see the greatness of nature in its own comfort, we are humbled. We feel at peace, one with the universal truth, nature. We ourselves are just a part of nature, just like any other animal. We are not allowed to break nature's rules. So when we try to get close to Mother Nature, we need to follow the rules. We need to keep in mind that though we might be nature's favored children, we are not alone. Mother Nature loves all her children alike. So, by understanding her beauty, her power, she should be given the place of respect. So when you go to an outing, or a camp, you are still bound by the laws of nature. The fact that you have paid money, does not make you any different, and thus just paying doesn't give you the right over nature's will. She works as she wants. And to understand nature, and even fulfill you curiosity, you need 'Wild Outdoors' with you. Shekhar Nanajkar