Cullerne House in 2025 – From Rescue Mission to Prime Multipurpose Venue
An invitation to invest in the role of Cullerne House in our next educational journey: as a Centre of Light, Love, Transformation and Hope that the world so desperately needs.
An invitation to invest in the role of Cullerne House in our next educational journey: as a Centre of Light, Love, Transformation and Hope that the world so desperately needs.
In this video Dræyk Hørn shares with us a walk through Cullerne Garden at the Findhorn Foundation in September 2020.
Network News, issue number 43, was originally published in Summer 2006. Features to be found in this edition include 30 Years Of Sacred Dance At Findhorn, The Heart Of Cullerne Garden, and The Moray Arts
Network News, issue 32, was originally published in Winter 2002. Features inside this edition include: A Boy's Own Story, Sketches Of Findhorn, and My Quest For The Magic Of Findhorn. To browse through
Network News, Issue number 13, was originally published in October 1997 Features in this edition include Story of Pollyanna, Discovering My Selves At Findhorn, and Tree Fever. To browse through the magazine
Project Cullerne was described in Gordon Cutler's article in One Earth Magazine. The following document is the prospectus for Project Cullerne written by Dick Barton in September 1982. We offer it both as facsimile in
This article was first published in One Earth magazine Volume 3, Issue 2, December/January 1982/3. Please click here for the 1982 prospectus for Project Cullerne by A.D.Barton. *** After four years of hard work and
One Earth, 2nd edition, volume 3, issue number 2, was originally published in December 1982 / January 1983. Features in this magazine include Thirty Years In The Wilderness; It's A Sweet Earth; and Project Cullerne.
In their second This is Our Barrel podcast Alex Wright and Callum Bell talk to me about my spiritual journey, my five years on the remote Hebridean Isle of Erraid and my work in the
Edmund John Wragg, John, was born in Bermuda on 6th May 1947, the only son of Alwyn Lumley Wragg and Marie Cecilia Wragg. His father was a Naval Chaplin and was posted to the dockyard