Peter Michael Bauer (born 1982) is a Portland, Oregon-based environmental and primitive skills educator, rewilding advocate, and performer. Bauer is the founder of Rewild Portland. He is known for his performance persona "Urban Scout", through which he helped bring the rewilding movement to broader public attention in the United States during the 2000s.
Peter Michael Bauer | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1982 (age 43–44) |
| Citizenship | American |
| Occupations |
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| Known for |
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| Movement | Rewilding |
| Website | petermichaelbauer |
Early life
editBauer, a fourth-generation northeast Portland native, grew up in the suburbs of Portland.[1][2] At the age of eleven, he earned his first Boy Scout merit badge for basketry.[3]
At sixteen he and his friend, author Lisa Wells, dropped out of high school in 1998 and traveled to New Jersey to study under naturalist and survivalist Tom Brown, Jr..[1][4][5] Bauer has cited the novel Ishmael, by Daniel Quinn as an early influence to pursue what would become the rewilding movement.[6][7][8]
In 2002, Bauer founded Mythmedia,[9] a nonprofit dedicated to "creating cultural and environmental change through the arts." It functioned as a hybrid art collective, film forum, and community advocacy organization, running programs that included writing classes for homeless youth and a summer camp teaching wilderness and urban survival skills.[4]
Urban Scout
editBauer began appearing as Urban Scout in the early 2000s,[10] dressed only in a covering of mud, soleless Adidas, and a rectangle of gray wool loincloth.[1][11] He performed the character publicly throughout Portland, demonstrating primitive skills in Pioneer Courthouse Square, like lighting cigarettes with a bow-drill fire.[7]
One reporter described Urban Scout as "a playful response to a real set of problems."[11]: 169 Bauer also began going barefoot and fashioned what he called "Urban Scout Shoes" — soleless Adidas that let him walk barefoot while technically satisfying no-shoes policies.[12]
Events organized under the persona included The Silent Spring Fling, the Nuclear Winter Formal (an annual "preemptive post-apocalyptic" dance party)[11]: 172 and a summer survival camp covering fire-making, gas siphoning, lock picking, and urban foraging.[11]: 174
In 2006, Bauer launched the blog urbanscout.org.[11]: 176
Rewild Portland
editIn 2009, Bauer founded the nonprofit Rewild Portland, which offers instruction in wild skills and ecological restoration for children and adults.[3]: 39 The mission of the organization is "to foster cultural and environmental resilience through place-based arts, traditions, and technologies".[13] Bauer says, "rewilding is about returning to a more wild and natural state".[7]
The organization works with several Native groups in the Willamette Valley. Classes have covered basket-weaving using invasive species (such as English ivy and Himalayan blackberry), stone tool-making,[3]: 39 [14] archery,[3]: 39 hide tanning, bow-making, herbal medicine, cooking roadkill, and urban foraging.[1]
He learned to speak the Native trade language of his local region, Chinook Wawa.[3] Bauer also leads an annual wild skills gathering workshop called "Echoes in Time".[3]: 39–40 In 2010, he self-published his book Rewild or Die.[5]
In Jessica Carew Kraft’s book Why We Need To Be Wild: One Woman’s Quest for Ancient Human Answers to 21st Century Problems, Kraft describes Bauer as "one of the most prominent popularizers of the craft in the rewilding scene today…"[3]: 38
In 2026, the peer-reviewed journal Hunter Gatherer Research (Liverpool University Press) published an article by Bauer: "The human rewilding movement: Iterative application of hunter-gatherer studies at Rewild Portland."[15]
References
edit- 1 2 3 4 Klepfer, Mike (May 2012). "Rewilding and surviving" (PDF). The Southeast Examiner.
- ↑ Wilkinson, Sarah (2008). "On the Trail of the Urban Scout" (PDF). Positive Living. No. 45. pp. 07–08.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Kraft, Jessica Carew (2023). Why We Need to Be Wild - One Woman's Quest for Ancient Human Answers to 21st Century Problems. Naperville, Illinois: Sourcebooks. p. 39. ISBN 978-1728276595.
- 1 2 Wells, Lisa (2008). "Urban Scout on Creating A World Beyond Civilization" (PDF). Green Anarchy. No. 55. p. 23.
- 1 2 Pocock, Joanna (2019). Surrender The Call of the American West. Toronto, ON: House of Anansi Press. p. 178. ISBN 9781487007249.
- ↑ Distefano, Anne Marie (Feb 1, 2008). "Prepping for the end of days can be one (re)wild party". Portland Tribune. Archived from the original on July 26, 2010.
- 1 2 3 Boulé, Margie (Aug 12, 2007). "'Urban Scout' hopes to prepare us for civilization's collapse". Oregonian.
- ↑ "Boulé (cont.): Earth-friendly messages were the key". The Oregonian. 2007-08-21. p. 69. Retrieved 2026-05-21.
- ↑ Sommer, Joshua (Feb 3, 2006). "Big-ban theorists". Oregonian.
- ↑ Baumgarten, Mark (April 2009). "Turn On, Tune In, Drop Out…Rewild!" (PDF). Sound Magazine. p. 39.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Wells, Lisa (2021). Believers: Making A Life at The End of the World. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. pp. 169–176. ISBN 978-0374110253.
- ↑ Parisi, Laura (Jan 25, 2006). "We're All Gonna Die Anyway" (PDF). Willamette Week.
- ↑ "About Rewild Portland". Rewild Portland. Rewild Portland. Retrieved May 5, 2026.
- ↑ Eastmann, Janet (23 March 2016). "Invasive English ivy: Don't hate it, weave it into a basket". The Oregonian. Retrieved 5 May 2026.
- ↑ Bauer, Peter Michael (2026). "The human rewilding movement: Iterative application of hunter-gatherer studies at Rewild Portland". Hunter Gatherer Research. 12 (1). Liverpool University Press. doi:10.3828/hgr.2026.4.