Tuesday, February 19, 2013
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Valentine's Eve is big around here
I can't believe how excited I am!
The kids are in bed and I'm just waiting for Paul to get home so we can put the final touches on our Valentine's surprise. This year is going to be amazing! What do you do for Valentine's day? Wait until you see what happens here.
Okay. So I can't know for sure that it will happen again, but let me tell you what happened last year. Last year Valentine's day got out to the normal "shout the kids out the door to the bus" routine until we opened the front door. We stopped flat.
There was the beginning of what turned out to be a magical day. A simple box of chocolates with a poem written out on yellow paper. There was one at every door in the village. That simple box of chocolates was like a portal to a magic place. I suppose everyone opened their door that morning and found the same thing I did. I suppose it did the same thing to every heart what it did to mine. I cracked right open.
It must have had that same effect on us all. Had to. By the end of the day I had a whole table of choclates and cookies. Poems and pictures. A red lamay door knocker still hangs on our bedroom door from that day.
It wasn't just our village. The whole of Yarrow had been decorated. Each store had a special display gifted to it by some unknown folks that cleaned it up as fast as they put it out. I remember walking Millie down the street. Looking at each magical installation. Noting different styles for sure.
The village sort of fell in love all over again last Valentine's Day. Winter can be a tough time in community. We see each other less. The work part stays and the fun part dwindles. We do our best, and those that have been here longer know it is part of the ebb and flow of this place. Valentine's Day last year felt like a renewal for me. People walked around with the biggest smiles. Our hearts were full.
I need that full heart again. Lord knows this winter has felt long and cloudy for me. I have barely held on until now- but here I am! Valentine's Eve! Falling in love with the village all over again!
- Paul's home.... Gotta run. See you tomorrow! ;)
The kids are in bed and I'm just waiting for Paul to get home so we can put the final touches on our Valentine's surprise. This year is going to be amazing! What do you do for Valentine's day? Wait until you see what happens here.
Millie on our Valentine's walk through Yarrow Photos are all taken by Vivian |
Okay. So I can't know for sure that it will happen again, but let me tell you what happened last year. Last year Valentine's day got out to the normal "shout the kids out the door to the bus" routine until we opened the front door. We stopped flat.
There was the beginning of what turned out to be a magical day. A simple box of chocolates with a poem written out on yellow paper. There was one at every door in the village. That simple box of chocolates was like a portal to a magic place. I suppose everyone opened their door that morning and found the same thing I did. I suppose it did the same thing to every heart what it did to mine. I cracked right open.
It must have had that same effect on us all. Had to. By the end of the day I had a whole table of choclates and cookies. Poems and pictures. A red lamay door knocker still hangs on our bedroom door from that day.
Yarrow Post Office |
My front door half way through the day |
I need that full heart again. Lord knows this winter has felt long and cloudy for me. I have barely held on until now- but here I am! Valentine's Eve! Falling in love with the village all over again!
Yarrow IS special. |
Ann's addendum
Addendum---
Since finishing my book page report blog, I printed out page 220 and left it lying on my dining table to allow for further digestion.
I’d like to add more to my Book Page Report comment that
“ we too, are not expecting all these qualities all at once, in all our villagers or village-wannabes.”
Diana has this daunting list of suitable qualities for successful villagers…
1. Someone who doesn’t ‘need’ it.
2. Someone with a healthy sense of self
Etc
It’s a useful list for us to aim for, but an impossible list for any of us to truly achieve.
Thursday, February 7, 2013
Ann's book report
Nutshells Niblets
Feb 2013
My Book (Page) Report
Author- Diana Leafe Christian
Title – Creating a Life Together- Practical tools to grow Ecovillages and Intentional Communities
Publisher - New Society Press
Status- Highly recommended book. You can get it from the library.
My report is on a single page - 220 about ‘Who does well in community?’
My report’s title --- Hey there iPig!
My daughter surprise gifted me with an iPod. And thus also endowed me with an addiction to pinterest. But already, I digress. :>)
I think the device’s highest and best use is for me to doing some writing --- hence this book report.
Monday, February 4, 2013
Woolly Wednesday
![]() |
Photo by Ann Clement. |
Woolly Wednesday can be a little wild. At one of their weekly gatherings, Lea decided to learn to knit, and Ann decided to teach her, and I don't know WHO decided that it would be reasonable for her very first knitting project to be a hat on intimidating-looking circular knitting needles.
The reasonable way to learn to knit is the following:
#1 Have your grandmother teach you a charming little rhyme to keep the steps straight in your mind ("Stab him / Hang him / Push him off the cliff," is what my grandma taught me when I was eight.)
#2 Practice squares and rectangles for approximately 30 years.
Maybe I'm ready for an Ann knitting lesson :-)
Photo by Ann Clement. |
Sunday, February 3, 2013
Barn Owl Presentation March 2, 2013
Dick Clegg, a local veterinarian, is a defender and champion of barn owls. He'll be doing a presentation at the Yarrow Community Hall on March 2 (important details such as time to be added soon).
Here are some pictures from 2010 when he did a small presentation in our heritage barn to teach us about our owls.
Saturday, February 2, 2013
Community Supper Secrets
Breaking Bread together is possibly one of the best, and most important part of community life. I am proud to say this is something we have always done very well in Groundswell Cohousing. (The multi generational cohousing community at the Yarrow Ecovillage).
Recently a new friend over at Creekside Cohousing in Courtney emailed asking for more information on how we manage 3 community meals per week with no common house. (Wait till you see what we do once we get that commercial kitchen!) As I was writing the information out I suddenly realized how proud I am of how we manage to hold together these integral meals together. I thought I'd share.
Some people like to cook with spouse, others like to mix it up. For me with small kids to tend to I prefer to do all the cooking and then Paul cleans after dinner. It works for me. Others prefer to always work with someone else. We've also considered adding pre teen to the team for clean up etc... because they eat so darn much! I like the idea of having the kids learning from adults in their community. It is important to me that the kids still have opportunities to contribute.
Something else we've considered is adding a second rotation just of moms for kid friendly food to be available each night. This for two reasons: 1. Kids are picky and need kid friendly food. 2. It seems more financially fair to the single people who don't have kids. In this system I would cook once per rotation on the adult meal, and once another night I'd check in with the cooks and augment the meal with a complementary kid dish... Mac and cheese, cut veg, something kids can be sure about.
- Do you cook vegetarian only? If not, have there been issues with people finding it unfair to pay the same rate for a meat meal as vegetarian?
- Who does the groceries and do they have a budget?
Whoever is cooking does the shopping and pays for that meal. For us this feels important. You can kill community suppers very quickly when you begin making the whole thing about the money. For us- people give what they can, cook what they want to serve, and the whole thing feels very abundant.
In my experience most meals for about 20 adults and a few kids (not every one is signed up for every night) ends up costing about 50-65 dollars. No money changes hands. Some meals are cheaper- other are more expensive. At the end of the day doing it this way allows people to "get a deal" on cook day because they aren't doing a whole receipt calculation. There is also something to be said for ease. My god if I had to keep every receipt and nickel and dime every time I cooked I would just quit. THIS MEANS: People MUST approach community dinners from a place of abundance. Of pure giving and receiving. People MUST treat others as they wish to be treated. So if you are cheap and you just want to work out the cheapest thing to make, and that is all you ever cook- your dinner rotation will surely teeter off. If you put hear and soul in? You'll surely fly!
- How do you handle sign-ups? How early do people have to sign up?
Julia and Ingrid have mastered this. It is a fancy google system that requires a diligent person to go around once every rotation with a clip board. I don't understand it completely but I know that once every six weeks or so I get a visit from "the clip board lady" and she asks how many night I want to come per week and which nights. If you sign up for tuesdays you cook and eat on tuesdays. We haven't worked out how to have people just eat whenever and cook whenever. We like this system because it is predictable. My kids KNOW that thursdays is our community supper night. We used to do three nights a week but with after school programming and homework once a week is the best we can muster. Some families do all three nights. They then cook one night per number of nights they eat per rotation. Did that make sense?
- We are planning a trial of cook teams whereby one of our two weekly potlucks would be replaced by a cook team meal. I DID suggest a limited time trial, but the response was pretty unanimous that they want it to be indefinite with opportunities for feedback and adjustment along the way (YAAY!).
- I also wanted to invite you to share a recipe with us. Something tried and true that you could recommend we use to increase our chance us of success in our early days. Perhaps you could also give us a few pointers on how to prepare this meal - timing etc. Many thanks if you can do this - and I look forward being able to reciprocate in future!!
Winners around here:
-Pancake supper: pancakes, eggs, bacon (on the side for meat always works) grilled tomatoes
- Any hearty soup and home made bread. Especially in winter
-Lasagna... one meat and one veg... but only on nights with no wheat or dairy concerns.
-Fried rice and veg with marinated Tofu
-"Assemble your own" tacos, salads, pasta bowls (Have different noodles, and sauces)
-Dahl and rice
-baked potatoes with chicken thighs, marinated tofu, and baked veg
-Channa Masala with rice, grated carrot and beets, and yogurt (one family makes this every time they cook. Some people like the routine of it. I would personally like to see families at least have one recipe in rotation for every night they attend dinner to allow for variety and fairness.
The trick is that no matter how much I make- it ALL gets eaten. I now cook and take out a rubbermaid container or two before I serve the meal. If someone shows up late it is there for them. If not- I have lunch for us the next day.
When eating in groups- people will always eat 40% more than on their own. As you do more meals, people will self correct and begin to eat less. At the end of the day it will all work out.
My favourite thing about the dinners is the ritual of it. We ALWAYS do a gratitude circle. Before we eat, every one stands together and shares one thing that they are happy about from their day. Mine this week was that my ear was on the mend. Paul's was that his latest batch of beer turned out. It gives us a way to keep up with the rest of the group. We also sometimes close by signing Sophie's little song...
"Thank you! Thank you! Boy it tasted good!
Thank you! Because of you I'm eating as I should!
Thank you! Thank you!"
Your group will of course come up with its own routines and rituals. I'm convinced they make every meal sweeter.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)