Listening to the Land
Listening to the Land You are the Dragon standing between Heaven and Earth. An oil rig between the toes of one foot, the Bay curved by the instep of the other. It has been said
Listening to the Land You are the Dragon standing between Heaven and Earth. An oil rig between the toes of one foot, the Bay curved by the instep of the other. It has been said
UNITED NATIONS AND FINDHORN FOUNDATION PARTNERSHIP In Service for Humanity and the Earth On arriving in 1992 at Findhorn, I learnt about the Community elders’ enduring aspiration of collaboration with the United
THE MORAY ART CENTRE A Centre for Beauty The message of Sir George Trevelyan in the 1970s spoke of a new Renaissance: The new society that is coming to birth will show standards and a
The New Findhorn Association Up until 1999, everything at the Findhorn Community came under the administrative umbrella of the Foundation. As it grew, it became increasingly difficult and expensive to manage, and there was no
The Reinvention of the Findhorn Foundation At Hallowe’en in 1996, Judy McAllister, the Foundation Focaliser, shocked the community by announcing that a management consultancy process had shown her and her team that the Foundation was
BUSINESS IN THE COMMUNITY In 1999, Gill Emslie, Judy McAllister and I set up the Findhorn Foundation Consultancy Service as a department in the Education Area. We ran the Business Experience Week, and did
PARK LIBRARY: FROM MIDNIGHT TO THE MORNING STAR The books in Park Library have lively conversations after the night porter’s been round? There’s no way to prove it, though toy shops are said to
The Woodhead Community The Woodhead Community started on 1 April 1994. The founders, two families with young children, and an older man, met at Findhorn. Reg was over 70 when he came to Findhorn. As
FINDHORN AND AFTERWARDS I have tried to leave Findhorn several times but something always brings me back. As I grow older, I am less involved in the community and more involved with my writing.
EarthShare EarthShare, Moray’s First Community Supported Agriculture scheme was launched in spring 1994. Forty-five different kinds of fruit and vegetables were grown in open fields and in polytunnels and at Cullerne Garden. They were distributed