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IN PHOTOS: Taking a 'Neanderthal' survival course with a modern-day caveman in Italy

AFP
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IN PHOTOS: Taking a 'Neanderthal' survival course with a modern-day caveman in Italy
Guido Camia dressed as a Neanderthal caveman walks in Chianale, in the Italian Alps, near the French border. Photo: Marco Bertorello/AFP

Many people visiting or moving to rural Italy dream of a simpler life. But if you really want to get back to basics, a self-styled “caveman” is offering Neanderthal-style survival courses in the Italian Alps.

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Guido Camia can show you how to light fires using just a flintstone, survive on a diet of insects and build a forest shelter.

The 37-year-old, who originally trained to be a patisserie chef, organises weekend trips where you can watch him climb rocks and fish from streams barefoot, dressed in animal skins, carrying a spear and looking like something out of "The Flintstones".

But Camia's outdoor survival courses also come with an official stamp of approval.

"For the past five years, my courses have been supervised by Italy's International Survival Federation (FISSS)," he told AFP. 

Camia says he also gives courses in more traditional attire, but his "passion for the paleolithic" gave him the idea of a Neanderthal sidekick.

Neanderthals - who lived from around 400,000 to 40,000 years ago  were "very intelligent", Camia says.

"He discovered fire. He was able to adapt to all weather."

"He was a nomad who moved around a lot, lived in caves, but also knew how to build small shelters." 
For a starting price of 80-100 euros per person per night, the basic course includes accommodation in a bivouac shelter.

Camia says he also offers sessions of two or three hours to families and school groups.

"I show them how Neanderthals lived, what they ate, how they lit fires, used a spear. I show them how to use the basic equipment to cook.

"For customers who opt for the beginners' survival course, "I provide them with enough to get by with."

But more advanced customers have to find their own food over a number of days.

"That makes people understand that the brain uses the most energy. And even very simple calculations become difficult after three days without food," he smiles.

Camia insists he is no “prepper” or "collapsology theorist" – those who believe in the pending collapse of industrial civilisation.

"But we have to know how to adapt to the changing climate, to other types of food and to be able to change our ways of life," he says.

All photos: Marco Bertorello/AFP

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