Our yurt!!

Our yurt!!

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Fun with Goats Workparty! April 27, 10-3

When: 
Apr 27 2013 - 10:00am - 3:00pm
Farm Tour 10 - Goats Browsing.A

Oh wow! It's mucking time! Yup - time to muck out the goat barn (note - to muck a barn means to dig out all the layers of bedding straw, which are saturated with a year's depostits of goat poop and urine, and to put it in a pile to compost and become awesome fertilizer).

Doesn't that sound so fun? Truly, it is an olfactory experience not to be missed. And, if we've got enough person power, we'll also be building a new browsing area for the goats tp eat all the new blackberry shoots growing in our "blackberry eradication" areas.

If muck shovelling, fence building, and animal camraderie sound fun to you, please join us, from 10-3 over at the barn. We'll have a lunch break mid-day and will feed you if you've worked hard :)

If you've got questions, please contact brenna[at]tryonfarm.org.

 

Goats and blackberries: square

Goats and blackberries: square

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Workshop near stage

Workshop near stage

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Why Julia loves TLC Farm (so give it some money!)

Julia teaching mushroom workshop

Warning  - this letter is seriously likely to inspire you to donate now!
 
Dear Tryon Life Community Farm,
As a student, it can be easy to lose yourself in the bubble of academia, insitutional ritual, and mass-produced cafeteria meals. Tryon Farm has been a reality checkpoint that's kept me balanced over the past few years. It has not done this by removing me from my role as a student though - it has done this by bringing the rest of the world into my learning experience.
 
I am a senior at Lewis and Clark College. I have been involved with TLC Farm for the past 4 years, living and working on the farm off and on, doing weekly chores, teaching and attending workshops, and engaging in daily farm life. I consider the farm one of the most valuable parts of my life as a student, and in return I have taken personal interest in making that experience available to others. I bring new students with me to the farm almost every week, I invite my peers to garden work parties, and I host an annual harvest dinner for students thats focused on the value of being connected to your food and your community.
 
"We are going to need a salad for this dinner," I told a group of studets at one of these annual harvest dinners, "and the ingredients are over there," I said, pointing towards the gardens and handing them two large baskets. "But I'm not a gardener," one replied, "I don't know what to pick." I then shared with these students one of my favorite lessons that I myself learned from working and living at the farm; you don't always have to know the "right" way to do something - its ok to just experience, experiment, and trust your intuition with many things in life. "Go into the garden," I told them, "and taste. When you like the way something tastes, add it to our salad."
 
Just recently, over two years since that dinner, one of those salad picking students thanked me for that experience. "It still is one of my favorite moments since I moved out here for college, probably one of the most important lessons I've had, too." To me, this higlights what TLC Farm has to offer, both to individuals and to the Portland community. The "lesson" that this student experienced (one that I and many others have also experienced), did not come in the form of a book, a lecture, or an otherwise constructed moment; it is the type of lesson that comes from the gift of self-release. This is the kind of learning that follows the moment when, by no one in particular, you are granted the permission to step outside your expectations and simply probe at the world and interect with it. It is learning that is internal, personal, and enduring.
 
From goat milking to gardening, from cooking food to sauna singing, from consensus process to childs' play, whether you have lived here for years or if you've just stopped by for the day, we are all, in some way, students at TLC Farm. I personally have gained so much in the past few years at TLC Farm that I could not have learned in a classroom. This includes hard skills such as animal tending, food preservation, clothing creation and repair, and natural building. It also includes harder to define constantly evolving abilities such as comprehending and valuing community, viewing myself as a part of a dynamic and living system, and releasing my fears of self expression and experimentation.
 
These are lessons that are crucial for a resilient and healthy community. The insight to realize and recognize the bounty that is all around us, the knowledge to effectively process and work with it, and the wisdom to value and protect it on a local level - these are all skills we need in our evolving and changing world and they are skills that will keep our communities resilient and compassionate. I am deeply thankful for my relationship with TLC Farm and it humbles me to know that there is likely so much more that I have learned, of even greater value than what I've described here, that I have not yet even begun to comprehend.
 
Thank you,
Julia Huggins
 

Fire circle

Fire circle

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Snowy sauna - banner background

Snowy sauna - banner background

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Teaching permaculture in the Green - banner

Teaching permaculture in the Green - banner

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Sunlit child before grove in B&W

Sunlit child before grove in B&W

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Why we love TLC Farm (so give it some money!)

Circle @ Bloom

TLC Farm is many things, to many people - at its root, it is a place that changes lives.  The land itself, and the community that surrounds it, provide a tangible alternative for people looking to connect more with each other and the land.  Your support now is crucial to keeping this land open, and the experiences alive.
 
We asked many people who have experienced TLC Farm to reflect on what this place means to them - as we read their responses, we noticed some main themes:
 
1. TLC Farm, as a place, is an amazing educational, spiritual, and practical resource.
2. The lessons and skills learned at TLC Farm are important and transformative in people's lives.
3. The focus on becoming more sustainable through building more community resonates deeply with people
 
As you read these reflections, please know that we are an amazingly resourceful organization, and run with very little overhead, but your donations to TLC Farm are key to making these experience possible.  Please give now!

Heidi Smith, Permaculture Design participant and parent of two Mother Earth
School children:

A place of wonder, adventure, peace, and solace, TLC Farm has been all of these for me, in the
past year and a half. From the expansive gardens, winding paths through nooks and crannies of
changing vegetation, artsy stage and sauna, rustic outdoor kitchen, beehives, chickens, goats, and
the beautiful forest surrounding the farm, visiting the Farm always puts a smile on my face.

Both of my children have had the magical experience of attending the Mother Earth School on the
farm and surrounding forest. I took a 6-month long working permaculture class and my husband
attended a natural building workshop at the farm. We have participated in several TLC Farm
festivals with our children, and sometimes we simply come to the Farm just to play. I had no idea
TLC Farm would become such an important and regular part of our lives, and I hope to see its
vision as a community education resource grow!

Travis Bell, Assistant Professor in Sustainable Design, Portland State University:
As a professor of architecture, focused in sustainable design, I am always searching for models that I can offer my students as a framework from which to design beautiful, appropriate architecture. Tryon Life Community Farm is a unique attempt to provide just such a model.  It is particularly notable in that it is situated at the boundaries of city, farm and nature and can thus explore the relationships between each within a modest scale.
My students have been able, through their study of the TLC, to begin to formulate alternative visions of architecture that serve human need and desire while accommodating natural patterns. This kind of academic work would not be possible without the existence of places like TLC Farm They are rare and important and deserve public attention and continued thoughtful stewardship.
 
David Bronstein, from Generation Waking Up:
It was a gift to host the GenUp Leadership training at TLC Farm - a place with such rich history.  The TLC Farm community, rooted in the power of that place, helped our participants sink into this power as well.  I know that a big part of the deep and lasting connections formed at this training happened because of the enduring relationship between the stewards and this special piece of land.


Rabbi Debra Kolodny, P'nai Or congregaion:
There are so many things I love about TLC Farm. It was a perfect venue for the P'nai Or congregation to hold its celebration of the Jewish New Year of the Trees, with its mix of intimate groves, eclectic structures and open spaces. P’nai Or shares the TLC Farm’s love and respect for all of Creation, so it was easy to design and lead a ritual lifting up the intraconnectivity of All That Is. Everyone present could feel the blessing, poignancy and majesty of the natural world as we prayed, sang, meditated and danced our way through the Four Worlds.  TLC Farm is a treasure!

 
 
 
 
 

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