Rates go up in 17 days!!

The last day for our Early Bird Discount will by May 31st, so if you know you’re coming you should register by then!

Current rates can be found here.  Basic rates for staying Friday and Saturday nights are $75 for camping, $155 for the Sophia House retreat center, and $175 for the Aurora Visitor Cabin.

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This is how you may look if you miss the Early Bird Discount.

Rates will increase by $15 on June 1st! That’s $15 more Friday and Saturday nights.  The additional fees for staying additional nights will also go up by $15 each.

Rates will go up again 1 week before the event.

Up-coming Likeminded Events

The Eastern Conference on Workplace Democracy is in July!

Held in Philadelphia, July 26 – 28, their theme this year is, “Growing Our Cooperatives, Growing Our Communities” – Democratic Community Economic Development Through Worker Ownership.

“We have a voice in our own communities’ economic development through democratic workplaces!  Democratic workplaces – such as worker-owned cooperatives – are growing in many ways as a viable alternative to a society that lacks meaningful humanizing jobs and democracy in everyday life.”

And one more event, up in Vermont this June!

Connecting Community Visions

June 15th at Wheelock Mountain Farm in Wheelock, Vermont

A gathering to explore politically and socially focused intentional housing communities.  Come join us for a day of workshops and storytelling.  Come share your ideas and skills to make us all stronger. Everyone invited to come early on Friday night June 14th for informal storytelling, potluck dinner, networking and socializing.  There are several indoor places to sleep and lots of space for camping. An additional donation of $10-$15 and a head’s up to wmf@riseup.net is requested of people staying Friday night.

Planned workshops for Saturday June 15th include: Developing a Language of Interdependence, Exploring Various Ownership Structures for Intentional Housing Communities, Educational and Child Rearing Practices in Intentional Communities.  If you have an idea for another conversation or workshop, please let us know.  Childcare available, please RSVP and let us know if you will be coming with kids.  Morning snacks and dinner provided, potluck lunch. Requested donation for the day of $10/person.

For more information see: http://wheelockmtnfarm.wikispaces.com/ or email: wmf@riseup.net

Wheelock Mountain Farm exists to create fundamental social change through education and non-violent action.  As a non-profit we create and host experiences that empower people to make change in their lives and to develop democratic leadership within their communities.  Located on 600 gorgeous acres of pasture and woodland, we are committed to preserve and protect the ecological integrity of the land and to share its richness with the larger community.

Call for Workshop Proposals

Help us put on an amazing conference!  Got a great idea for a workshop to present?  Send us a proposal.

We are looking for dynamic presenters who can offer interactive and/or engaging workshops.  The focus of the event is on intentional communities, but we also have workshops on other forms of cooperative living and working, as well as other alternative lifestyle topics.  There is of course limited space in our schedule of workshops, so if you’re proposal is not selected you can also present it in our Open Space sessions on Sunday.

Resource-sharing panel discussion

Workshop blocks are usually 1.5 or 2 hrs.  The conference site is rustic and mostly outdoors. There is limited electrical access; presentations requiring projectors or other electrical presentation tools can be accommodated if requested in advance.

Presenters are encouraged to participate in the whole weekend.  Camping is the standard accommodation; indoor accommodations are available for a fee.

Please send a one to three paragraph workshop description with title and a little bit about yourself to conference(at)twinoaks(dot)org.

 

The Baltimore Free Farm!

sign3510Sky and I went up to the Baltimore Free Farm last week to share our communities slideshow and drum up excitement for the Communities Conference. We left feeling super jazzed and inspired, enough that we gave a strong invitation to the BFF folks to come down and present at the conference.  No final word on that yet but we’ll keep you posted.

Meanwhile, here’s their story; or hopefully enough of it to get YOU inspired and excited about them too!

mission

We showed up blind on Wednesday evening and right away it was clear that there’s a lot going on here. A little crew of folks hung out in the bikeshop area, and remnants of Free Food day lingered in front of the door. Across the street was a large garden and a cluster of 3 row houses.
fertileresistance

After our presentation, we stayed to chat with Billy, one of BFF’s founding members. A short, wiry guy with mussed hair and a little fluff of bunny-tail pinned to his jean shorts, he happily stayed chatting with us until nearly 11pm, despite having just made plans with another Free Farmer to meet at 5am to break down a greenhouse.

The inception of BFF:  About 4 years ago Billy’s contracting business had exploded in his face, along with his dreams of mainstream success. He and some friends all found themselves in the same position, jobless and without prospects.  They started squatting one of the 3 adjoining rowhouses…3houseand right away started eying the warehouse across the street. They managed to find the owner, and did a walk through with him while spinning the vision of what they would create here; workshop space, performance space, beer brewing space, etc. After meeting these kids for a couple hours, the owner handed them the keys. objectsThey cleaned it out in exchange for rent for many months, and now pay a ridiculously low rent (now about $800/month). Meanwhile, Billy and his wife Ali purchased the “black hole” house from the city for $7500, next door to the one they’d squatted. They and their friends continued squatting the house next door while working on the warehouse and the house. Eventually they worked out a rental agreement for the 3rd of the three houses.

There are also a number of plots surrounding the 3 row houses. Up above is a collective garden, managed by the BFF folks. They give away a lot of the the produce on BFF’s weekly “free food” days. There’s a greenhouse, where they grow starts for many gardens in the city.  greenhousecisternThen there’s the orchard on the side; this land was bought by a developer who doesn’t seem to be moving very quickly. Still, it is under threat at any point. The front plot is a community garden, nominally $30/plot for the season. collective gardenThey have a 5 year agreement with the city for this plot. There’s also a chicken house, a giant brick oven, a rabbit warren, and a neighborhood tool library.

BFF is abuzz with activity. The warehouse has a performance space where they host 2 shows a month, with home-brewed beer and pizza (made in the brick oven) for donation; this money goes towards covering their monthly rent. There are workshops, presentations, yoga classes…there’s a large work area with lots of tools, and part of the space is taken up by a community bike shop.bikeshop2 There’s an office, zine library, and basic kitchen as well.officeworkshop

 Billy himself is very inspiring. He grew up in this neighborhood, and knows everyone on the block personally. They all feel comfortable telling him their problems, asking for beer, and just chatting. He is totally committed to transforming this little piece of the city. As he told us, “This whole area is on fire. And that fire is sending out millions of sparks to all the rest of the city. I want to come back in five years and see that fire spread all over the city.”billy

First workshop scheduled!

We have our first workshop confirmed! Embodied Community Intimacy will be led by Elena   Zubulake and Victor Warring:

embodied intimacy image

“This workshop is about creating strongly embodied relationships in community. Through experiential movement, improvisation, dance, music, body work, conscious communication, play, and contemplative practice, we take a group dive below the thinking mind to experience ourselves as members of an embodied organism.”

 

Just can’t get enough!

For those of you who can’t get enough, or just can’t wait for the Twin Oaks Communities Conference, The Farm in Tennessee is hosting it’s 5th annual Conference on Community and Sustainability.

Held Memorial Day weekend, May 24 – 26, here’s some words from the organizers on the event:

Farm  School building web

The Farm’s Solar School, a conference workshop location

“In community we depend on each other, and it is clear that each one of us has value and something to give, contributions to the whole, made visible through our work.
Find your passion:
  • Green Building
  • Green Business
  • Organic Food Production
  • Alternative Education
  • Midwifery
  • Environmental Activism
  • Peace and Justice Activism
  • Music and the Arts
  • and more
There is room for everyone in community, and you will have the opportunity to see how this can be expressed in a very real way when you are part of our special gathering.”

Introduction to the New Economy

This year’s Monday program will be multi-faceted and will focus on introducing concepts and examples of the New Economy.  What the heck is the New Economy?  My comrade Orion Kreigman up in Boston gave me some great leads to pass on to you!  Orion actually came to the Communities Conference something like 10 years ago to talk about urban communities.  Here’s some great info to absorb:

This is an article from the Nation on the New Economy.

Here’s a group in Boston that Orion works with: Jamaica Plain New Economy Transition 

Another great group in Boston, the heARTbeat collective.

A new development, similar to Transition Town groups are Resilience Circles.

A new network for local, living economies and sustainable business network hubs.

The bulk of the Monday program of the Communities Conference will be a symposium on these ideas and a look at the small local groups that are the human-scale, driving force behind these national movements.

It Begins… Communities Conference 2013!

Hello again!  We’re starting to get in gear for this years Communities Conference.  We had our best attendance in 15 years last year and we’re aiming to do at least as well this year!

 

This year’s theme:  Community Vs. Uncertainty

What role do intentional communities have in the uncertain times we live in?  How can we leverage cooperation and resource sharing to deal with the challenges we face?  How are people coming together to create a society that might able to weather the coming storms and end up being satisfying and sustainable?

 

Stay tuned as this years organizing begins to take shape!

Success!

Hey everyone! Thank you for helping to make the 2012 Communities Conference a great success. We had 185 people in attendance, not including Twin Oakers and Acorners, which is the highest attendance record in recent years. Thanks for being there to share your energy, talents and ideas!

If you attended and did not get a chance to fill out an evaluation, please click here to fill one out now. It will help us put on an even better conference next year.

Also, if you have any great photos from the event this year that you’d like to share, feel free to email them to us at conference at twin oaks dot org so we can put them on our website or use them for promotional materials in the future.

Thanks again, y’all, and we hope to see you next year!



Tomorrow!

Friends – just an FYI that we are about to go into hiding because the 2012 conference starts tomorrow (!!!), so if you have any last-minute questions that you can’t find the answers to on our website, please call the Twin Oaks operator between 9am and 5pm tomorrow and from 9am to noon on Saturday. The phone number is (540) 894-5126.
 
Please encourage your spontaneous friends to show up at the Conference and register there if they want to join in on the fun! We have 135 people pre-registered and we are expecting several last-minute arrivals. This year’s conference is sure to be the best in recent years. The more, the merrier!
 
Good luck getting here and we can’t wait to see y’all tomorrow…