Wednesday, 10 September 2014

Festivals, rainy Somerset and sunny Devon

The green woman at Green Man festival!


Your Space bell tent at Santosa  yoga festival
Your Space treatments at Santosa yoga festival
Bob with the goats at Wookey farm
Stone mounds and ribbons left as offerings at the magical St Nectans Glen in North Cornwall
Bob and Sarah McPeg camping overlooking Looe in South Cornwall

Tuesday, 5 August 2014

Wonders of the West - Buddhist festival, Biodynamic farming and Monkton Wyld...

The week before last passed pleasantly whilst stewarding at Green Earth Awakening a Buddhafield camp in the Black Down Hills, Somerset  (cue jokes about how hard can it possibly be to steward Buddhist punters at a festival with no bar!) This was a great opportunity to meet people involved in a variety of community, permaculture, environmental and craft projects across the UK. Besides GEA Buddhafield hosts many different camps throughout the year, see www.buddhafield.com for info.

There were many chances to be creative – jewellery making with scrap metal, willow basket weaving, metal forging, felting and knitting. We got stuck in with carving our own spoons at Wayne’s Wood (an unbelievably absorbing and addictive pastime!)

Spooning!

There were workshops aplenty such as yoga, meditation, Buddhism for beginners, drumming and kirtan (which gave Sarah’s harmonium a few airings!). Talks were held on subjects such as ‘the benefits of living in community’, ‘the work that reconnects’ based on the groundbreaking writings of Joanna Macy, various aspects of permaculture including forest gardening and sustainable design systems for growing and living.

We had a quick trip to Dartington in Devon for the launch of the Biodynamic Land Trust shareholder offer. The launch involved a walk on the land and a gathering at the village hall - a short film of the event is on You Tube... http://youtu.be/SADEMM0Kmxs

The trust intends to secure farmland at Week, Dartington for the development of sustainable farming methods. Initially this will be leased to The Apricot Centre (currently based in Manningtree, Essex where Bob works) to establish a farm using permaculture design along with organic and biodynamic methods. The launch event was well attended by locals from the area and there is much support for this venture which will create biodiversity, produce, jobs and a hub for the local community to meet and learn. Shares in the land start from just £100 bringing social, cultural and environmental returns for yourself and future generations through the development of new and innovative farming. For more details see www.biodynamiclandtrust.org.uk


Bob and Sarah McPeg on the lawn at Monkton Wyld Court
We've just completed another two weeks of Wwoofing at Monkton Wyld Court, an education centre for sustainable living in Dorset. It is a striking building in Gothic style but only around 150 years old, set in beautiful countryside and sporting an award winning compost loo with a view and it’s very own licenced pub in a shed in the garden! 

Smallest licenced pub in England!

Volunteers help with the running of the centre and B&B so tasks can include weeding or harvesting fruit and veg, clearing nettles and brambles, bed making, food preparation, wood processing, grass scything, hay making and cow milking to name a few. We learnt lots and it was interesting to be a part of a small community of less than 15 people, a completely different experience to the much larger community at Old Hall where our first Wwoof was. To read more about staying, volunteering or studying at Monkton Wyld Court visit www.monktonwyldcourt.org

 
The McPeg's admire the Dorset countryside...


Sunday, 13 July 2014

First stop – Old Hall East Bergholt, Suffolk

Bob and Sarah Peg at Old Hall



Beginning at the beginning with what on earth is Wwoofing....

WWOOF stands for World Wide Opportunities on Organic Farms http://www.wwoof.org.uk/
WWOOF UK is a membership charity, teaching people about organic growing and low-impact lifestyles through hands-on experience. There are thousands of Wwoof hosts around the world offering placements at a myriad of interesting communities and projects. Becoming a Wwoofer is a fantastic way to travel cheaply, learn new skills, experience alternative ways of living in community settings and to meet other travellers.


Carrots with tall netting to keep out carrot fly
Old Hall is a community of adults and children sharing this old manor house and 70 acres of land at a beautiful site in the middle of Constable Country in East Bergholt, Suffolk. Much of the land is cultivated or used for raising livestock, providing abundant food for the members. We were given a warm welcome by all at the hall and our two weeks of work was varied and interesting. 


The Wwoofers day was structured in two shifts working for different community members. The morning shift from 9.30 til lunch and the afternoon from 2.00 – 4.30pm. Leisurely tea breaks were always included mid shift!
Signs let the Community know
when things are ready to pick

The tasks included tending to the areas that provide nearly all of the community’s fresh fruit and vegetable we planted cabbages, weeded French beans, broccoli and spinach, picked raspberries and cherry plums for eating, freezing and jamming and harvested and bagged up potatoes. We also  loaded up the ‘Dragon’ – a wood fired water and central heating system, slashed nettles, strimmed thistles and cleared brambles, stacked wood and tidied up the garden in preparation for the ‘Ruby Do’ Old Hall Community’s  40th birthday party which will take place later this summer. Outside of Wwoof shifts it was possible to help or watch members with their regular duties or additional work such as weaving willow hurdles, feeding the pigs and milking the cows, making cheddar cheese and churning butter in the dairy.

There is always someone making cheese!
We made friends with other Wwoofers who included university students from England, Switzerland, and The Netherlands interested in community life and low impact living, teachers from Spain looking for a cost effective holiday close to London where they visited on their days off and a retiree who has been Wwoofing their way around the UK for the past four years!
Willow Hurdles made by Richard 
The members of the community range in age from young children to pensioners, some have been there since the beginning in 1974. Each individual or family has their own unit including a lounge and bedrooms, the kitchen is a shared space. Each member contributes around 15 hours of time per week to the running of the farm i.e. tending vegetables or livestock and looking after the domestic tasks such as cooking, bread-making and washing up.

Highlights of our stay included meeting the members of this diverse and interesting community – chatting over a cuppa or being inspired round a late night bonfire; the delicious food – abundant vegetables, occasional succulent meat dishes, creamy milk and tasty cheese; walking the footpaths around the estate – meadows and woodland with wonderful views of Constable country.
Old Hall Lawn and Main Building