Transition Whatcom's Great Unleashing "Community Living Working Group" welcomes all to share ideas, inspiration and resources for Co-housing, Cooperative Living and Ecovillage development here.
Location: Bellingham
Members: 60
Latest Activity: May 1
Started by Bruce Horowitz Jan 10. 0 Replies 0 Likes
Room for Rent in Sunnyland available Feb 1st Good-size Bedroom with large closet in quiet apartmentin kid-friendly, gluten-free, eco-conscious household. Great location, good neighbors and fabulous…Continue
Started by Shana Lewis Dec 30, 2012. 0 Replies 0 Likes
Hey ya'll community-minded folks. We are looking for an active, emotionally mature person (preferably female) to join us in our community household here on the Southside of B'ham (Happy Valley),…Continue
Started by Bruce Horowitz Sep 29, 2010. 0 Replies 0 Likes
Hey Folks!I hear the co-housing visit was a blast.Who's ready to get the ball rolling again?Damon - ready to talk about the FARM?See y'all saturday!~BruceContinue
Started by Bruce Horowitz Sep 29, 2010. 0 Replies 0 Likes
Cornwall Park, 3 pm: Music, picnicing, games -- your community!Hope to see you all there!Continue
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Comment by Brian Kerkvliet on May 1, 2013 at 8:57am Hi Friends, I wanted to let you all know that we have a rental opening for someone who wants to live at Inspiration Farm. If you or someone you know is interested the can check out our craigs list posting http://bellingham.craigslist.org/apa/3772714047.html
or contact us directly
398-8227
Thanks for helping spread the word
Brian
Inspiration Farm is an 11 acre homestead styled farm. Integrating Biodynamic and Permaculture practices in relation to annual & perennial food systems, animal husbandry, appropriate technology and land / water nutrient management. Currently we have 1.5 acres in annual production and 2 acres of fruit, nut and other perennials. We have chickens for meat and eggs, milk cow and goats and raise turkeys and pigs most years.
Comment by Travis Linds on October 3, 2012 at 3:51pm I am renting rooms in my house located just south of Ferndale and only 15 minute drive from Bellingham. Available November 2nd. The house is located on just over 1 acre and the residents will contribute to growing large gardens and raising animals for food. The rent is low but it is expected that you will put some time into gardening, house/yard maintenance, raising animals or producing biodiesel. The goal of this "homestead" is to build community and reduce our footprint. The house is currently heated with diesel and we will produce our own biodiesel for heat as well as for fuel for transportation (i have all the equipment, sources of waste veg oil and a truck converted to run on veg oil). Children are encouraged, as there is also a desire to make this a place of learning. My daughters will be living there part time too, with me. I also plan on raising bees and rabbits in the spring, and there will be laying hens and ducks. The property has several fruit trees with more planned. Also we will plant berry plants and several gardens with a goal of providing food year round in the future. The property has a hot tub, an artist studio (with wheel), a pond, an in ground trampoline and outdoor fireplace. Located just across the road from the Nooksack river (seasonal fishing opportunities) but outside of the flood plain. Once established someone could live here for very little money, low rent, grow and raise most of our own food, use free waste veg oil for heat and fuel, etc. A simpler life can be much more rewarding, not to mention that he who teaches his child to live on small means leaves her a fortune.
Comment by Beth Andrews on May 10, 2012 at 11:16pm Hey all,
I'm new to TW, as well as to the B'ham community. I just started at WWU this quarter, and am currently living on Camano Island where I have super affordable rent in my mom's basement apartment with my two children. This quarter I managed to schedule my classes for only two days a week, and am carpooling, resulting in a once a week drive, which is tolerable, but not ideal. I'm sure i'll be hard-pressed to maintain such a schedule for future quarters..and I have two years left before completing my BA. My kids go to school on Camano, so I jet strait from class back home to get them, and I am too far away to really get involved in either community as I'd like to..
I am contemplating a move to Bellingham, and would seriously love it. I, however, am a single mom, with two kids, full time student, and no job in the area...and all rent will be paid from taking out larger student loans, which is an unsettling prospect.
This looks like a good place to network with like-minded community members to get the word out, if anybody knows of any super affordable rental situations that could squeeze in a modest mamma and her two kids in some accordian style fashion..above garage, basement apt, Mother-in-law, duplex, condo, whatever. I am down for work/gardening/painting style projects for rent trade...Just need a place to get my feet on the ground in a new town in as seemless a way as possible, with as little stress and anxiety to the two kiddos. If anybody knows of anything that might fit the bill, or has any leads, please feel free to comment! Thanks alot for your time, and I hope to get to know some of you in the future! Looks to me good people!
Beth
Comment by Cindi Landreth on March 7, 2012 at 12:33pm Hello People
I subscribe to Diana Leafe Christian's Ecovillage newsletter and found this decision making process embedded. I thought some of you might be interested.
Systemic Consensus —
Fast, Visual, and Hard to Argue With
In July, 2011, I attended the annual meeting of the ecovillage network of Austria, held at Gänserndorf Cohousing near Vienna. There I participated in a decision-making method called Systemic Consensus (Systemisches Konsensieren in German), developed by two professors at the University of Graz in Austria.
In Systemic Consensus the group develops and discusses proposal just as in the regular consensus process. All group members discuss the proposal and modify it and improve it as they wish. When it comes time to make the decision, however, they don't use the three options of "support the proposal," "stand aside," or "block." Instead, each group member expresses his or her amount of resistance to the proposal through a point scale of 0 to 10. Apparently this method works very well and people like it! Read more.
~ 1 Bedroom upstairs Apartment in older home for RENT in Columbia neighborhood ~ $650 includes utilities
~ SEEKING gardener for 1/2 acre of "A little country in the city"
Permaculture skills A Plus!! shared, rotational Lawn mowing required and plenty of bed space - It could be a couple's shared space for the right cozy couple.
756-9919 for downstairs tenants ~ Jamie and Matt
224-2223 for Landowners ~ Larry and Sue
Available Sept 1st
Comment by Behrouz on August 24, 2011 at 6:37am I wish there was more activity on this front. After all there is more efficiency / less waste when people share in close proximity (as long as they share the same lifestyle of course). I believe cooperative living and work is by necessity at the heart of our evolving economics. It is hard to really share effectively when we are disconnected in space - unless we are talking about virtual space! lol. And sharing (including a sharing economic system) is the key to our survival as a species.
The tasks at hand are immense. Individually we cannot even come close to becoming realistically independent and self-reliant. Think of the waste / energy inefficiency /pollution /environmental destruction / myriad of mental illnesses and personality disorders / conflicts , legal battles, and wars / crime and predation by anonymous entities on the vulnerable / etc. etc. The money / commodity economy can fool you to believe that (of course as long as you are profitable for it e.g., have a middle-level or higher job position or pension or other source of income) you have a choice without realizing the true cost of this individualistic lifestyle. Where is the security in that anyway, in this economy? What happens when you lose your job, or get sick with no "insurance", or your "loved ones" leave you, or struck by some other disaster? It tells me we don't have enough people yet who feel threatened and are in this out of necessity rather than choice. Well by the time that necessity strikes some here it may be too late. We are all vulnerable. Make it easier. Think of yourselves as the future unemployed and dispossessed. Our consciousness needs to catch up with the disasterous reality of our time.
Let's learn to share especially in our living spaces as an example of understanding our true insurance (each other), expression of our common interests and goals, cohesion, willingness to work more effectively to achieve our true realistic individual potential as a species on a global scale (rather than one individual superachieving at the cost of thousands or millions perishing - i.e., the current economic system paradigm).
Comment by Alan Seid on May 9, 2011 at 1:37pm The info below was sent to me by Craig Ragland of Songaia Cohousing and the Northwest Intentional Communities Association (NICA). I post it here as an FYI.
cheers!
~Alan
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There are two community seminars being offered next week on Friday,
May 13th and Sunday, May 15th. You'll find info on each after the
description...
Building Gift Community: We Need Each Other
---experiential seminar, enjoy a taste of gift culture---
Imagine “your” community: Living in your own home, easy travel
distance apart, a tribe of men and women, safely intimate and
committed to each other. In these times of rapid change you’ve claimed
your place and this family of choice. Together you’ve created safety
nets of bonded connection, as you support each other’s action in the
world to literally reinvent the new Gift Culture.
Seminar Intention:
Vision a possibility of the community you want.
Explore the values, commitments and structures needed.
Consider membership, who decides, how and when.
Learn how men and women can be together in a safe way.
Experience the emerging Gift Culture.
We will reference our own community experience and new book: We Need
Each Other: Building Gift Community
with 52 chapters of powerful context and “How-To” specifics.
Visit our website: http://www.weneedeachother.net/
Bill Kauth: Since 1984 Bill has co-founded the New Warrior Training
Adventure of the ManKind Project, Inner King and Warrior-Monk
Trainings. Author: Circle of Men published in 1992. His new book We
Need Each Other is co-authored with his wife Zoe Alowan. Zoe has been
deeply engaged in sacred art for decades. As painter, sculptor,
dancer, songstress, storyteller her work in women’s circles reclaims
beauty and wisdom. She facilitates with humor, co-honoring the Divine
Feminine and Divine Masculine.
Gift Community seminar in Bellingham
Date: Friday, May 13th - Time: 7:00 – 9:30
Place: Bellingham Cohousing, 2614 Donavon Ave. (park on the street)
Cost: We will invite a contribution
Gift Community seminar in Marysville
Date: Sunday, May 15 - Time: 12:30 - 3:30pm
Place: Evergreen Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, 1607 Fourth St.,
Marysville WA.
Cost: We will invite a contribution
Hi all,
I'm wondering if we can have a meeting?
Comment by Rhys Faler on August 18, 2010 at 2:06pm
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