Ten Year Achievements!

Farm in mist

In 2015 we compiled our top ten achievements from our first ten years. Here they are:
 
TLC Farm's Top Ten Awesome Accomplishments (and why they matter!)

 

  1. Educated over 10,000 students about local food systems, natural building, and community-based sustainability. Undoing alienation from the natural world, TLC Farm engaged thousands of students, from preschool through grad school, in holistic approaches to food and land stewardship. Many of these young people have cultivated a lasting relationship with this land and TLC Farm mentors, providing them skills and connections to become change-makers in Portland and beyond.
  2. Hosted hundreds of workshops and skill-shares. From earthen building to herbal medicine, animal husbandry to social justice, the skills participants gained have led to creating successful new social enterprises, improving individual and community food security, supporting healthy and effective group process, and much more.
  3. Co-launched the first all-outdoor early education program in the country, now used as a model for similar programs nationwide! Over the last eight years, the Mother Earth School has provided an exemplary outdoor immersion program for preschool and kindergarten students, along with a summer camp for children of all ages. TLC Farm's unique access to farm and forest provides an ideal campus for these young children to engage and explore.
  4. Turned an unused field into the Village Green, which now serves as a venue for community gatherings of all stripes. Consisting of a massive cedar-shingled outdoor kitchen, 30-foot yurt with a back porch, butterfly-roofed stage, whimsical tea house, beautiful earthen sauna, and composting toilets, the Village Green has housed retreats and gatherings for dozens of diverse groups. From housing advocates to mycologists, youth activists to religious communities, TLC Farm provides a unique and connective event location.
  5. Launched ReCode Oregon, which changed state law multiple times to allow for more sustainable building practices. Since 2007, ReCode Oregon has organized to change state and local laws for DIY sustainability practices. ReCode's first major victory was legalizing the reuse of graywater for irrigation in all of Oregon. It has since gained state approval for site-built composting toilets, and has been instrumental working with DEQ on decentralized wastewater treatment.
  6. Connected people directly with sources of food, often ones they don’t experience in an urban environment. TLC Farm's dairy goat herd is very popular (especially when they have babies!), and we provide access to permaculture food forests and orchards, a large educational garden, and wild-harvested native foods. By connecting students and other visitors directly with food sources, we empower them to cultivate more of their own food and expand their experience of what is edible. (Teaching people to eat raw nettles is a beloved art form here!)
  7. Built all of our structures in educational workshops, using re-used or natural materials, and designed to weave the human environment into the natural world. Conversations in a round room, or in a space made from branches or earth, take on a different nature than those inside four walls with fluorescent lighting. We shape our buildings to reflect the beautiful fields and forest that surround us, and the buildings then shape our community connections.
  8. Hosted annual seasonal events that provide consistent opportunities for the public to connect with the land and each other. In addition to opening the land to visitors six days a week, over the last ten years TLC Farm has organized seasonal events each spring, fall and winter. These celebrations bring hundreds of people to the land to make new friends, learn new skills and simply enjoy this amazing place together.
  9. Successfully shared this land with several groups ─ a land trust, nonprofit & intentional community ─ and created a model that influenced dozens of groups nationally and internationally. Do you have any idea how many people call for advice? How to protect farm land from development, how to create legal and financial structures for multiple groups sharing land (as TLC Farm does with the Cedar Moon residential worker collective), and other aspects of creative land tenure -- we've learned a lot over the past ten years, and love to pass the knowledge on.
  10. Organized thousands of people to save this land from development, honored our commitment to repay the debts incurred in acquiring the land, and creatively navigated another major milestone with a social investment-based refinance of our mortgage. Your donation helped us protect this land, but almost half the funding for the land acquisition came in the form of bank loans. For 10 years, we have maintained the financial solvency needed to be in integrity with this debt. This past summer, we refinanced primarily through social investment, with an agreement that no matter what, the land can never be developed!
  11. And a bonus! Every workshop, event, educational program and infrastructural project is offered on a sliding scale gift-based economy, and powered by volunteers. Holding a firm commitment to making all programs and events economically accessible is a fundamental value of TLC Farm, and is made possible by the ongoing contributions of an incredible base of volunteers and donors

Survey

baby goats 2010

Our New Survey:

Please take a few minutes to give us feedback at our survey about what you want to see at TLC Farm.  We are getting ready to celebrate our 5 year anniversary this January, and part of what we're doing is re-visiting our organizational vision for the next 20 years. Your input, as our community member, is essential to that process, and we'd greatly appreciate any time you could spend letting us know your thoughts on the farm.

Thanks!

Lakeman's Vision

Lakeman's Vision

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Save the land.jpg

Save the land.jpg

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Amanda Darling

Offering or Requesting?: 
Requested
Departure time: 
Wed, 11/17/2010 - 6:30am
Meetup location: 
Peoples Food Coop (SE Tibbetts and 21st)
Spaces: 
1
Contact details and notes: 
Would like to go to the meeting on Mother Earth School. email: addarling@gmail.com

11850 subdivision postcard .jpg

11850 subdivision postcard .jpg

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Mother Earth School Land Acquisition: Needs YOU!

When: 
Jul 20 2011 - 7:00pm - 9:00pm
Lakeman's Vision

We urgently need your help! Tryon Life Community Farm has launched a campaign to save a 2.3 acre piece of land that borders Tryon Creek State Park from becoming an 8-home development. WE NEED TO SAVE THIS LAND FROM DEVELOPMENT AND WE HAVE AN AMAZING VISION!! Please come to our next strategic planning meeting to find out about how you can help with this amazing opportunity.   We meet every third Wednesday of each month.  In July, the location of the meeting is the land itself.  Please park at TLC Farm and then walk up the road to 11850 SW Boones Ferry Rd.  See you there!

Herbalism for Intentional Communities

echinacea.greenhouse

This six-weekend program is designed for members of intentional communities to learn the skills for sharing herbs and addressing the health needs of the collective experience with plant medicines.
The goal of the course is to bring herbal medicine back to its function as a group activity for communities to use to engage fully in sustainable relationships with the plants of their bioregion. The skills taught in the course are intended to be shared amongst all community members in such a way that taking care of each other can be a collective activity: making medicines together, taking herbs together, gardening and harvesting together, and healing together. We are seeking to generate the tools for off-the-grid health care that moves beyond the practitioner-client relationship, restoring the tribal method of healing as a community endeavor.
We are restoring herbal medicine as a collaborative act of promoting community health from within. Off-the-grid healthcare that everyone in a community can participate in. “Healthy communities take care of community health.”
Taught by local herbalists Erico Schleicher, Rebecca Reeder, and others
 
Curriculum is oriented towards community herbalism, including classes in botany of Northwest medicinal plants, harvesting and gardening, therapeutic actions, cooking with herbs, herbal first aid, medicine making as community ritual, and taking herbs as a shared experience. We will focus on identifying needs of community that can be addressed with plant medicines, such as first aid, shared emotional stresses, communicable illness, seasonal conditions, local toxins, and specific work-based issues.
 
Course Details:

  • Class size: 10-12
  • $900 if registered before Dec 15, $1000 after Dec 15.
  • plus $50 materials fee
  • Location: Tryon Life Community Farm in Southwest Portland
  • Option for out-of-town participants to stay at Tryon Farm overnight with slight extra cost
  • About 100 hours of study
  • Dates and times: Six weekends, Saturday and Sunday from 10am to 6pm

 
The 2011 dates are not set in stone, but with only slight possible adjustment they are:

  • February 12-13
  • April 2-3
  • May 21-22*
  • September 10-11
  • October 15-16
  • December 3-4

*subject to possible change
 
For more info about the course, follow this link to our webpage: http://communityherbalism.com
Or feel free to contact the instructors:
Erico 503.473.3899  paradoxrainbow@yahoo.com
Rebecca 510.495.4494  tidewalker@wildmail.com
Application available for download below.

beehive collective design workshop

beehive collective design workshop

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Westwind

Offering or Requesting?: 
Requested
Departure time: 
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 3:00pm
Meetup location: 
Barbur Transit Center (9750 SW Barbur)
Contact details and notes: 
503.360.1330. http://www.yasamsacekimi.com bikeblender@gmail.com My kiddo & I would love to get a ride to the farm Sunday afternoon. Also need a ride after the evening meeting; either back to the transit center, or our house near Mt Tabor

Feedback and participation welcome! Please send bug reports to web@tryonfarm.org

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