GENESIS Issue XI, August 8, 1997
In this issue: How we bought the caravan park To browse through the magazine please use the < > arrows at the left and right of the window. For easier reading, use
In this issue: How we bought the caravan park To browse through the magazine please use the < > arrows at the left and right of the window. For easier reading, use
Mo's Bungalow Mo bought a bungalow on the Findhorn Bay Caravan Park and opened her home to many guests over the years. She ran a hostel-style B&B and practised an open-door culture. The key was
Click to see whole book The history of this period in the community's development is extensively documented and rather than repeat a well known story at length, this section contains some key facts
The following is a work in progress. It was triggered by the Topic - Buying the Caravan Park in 1983 and the desire to clarify how the agreements then have shaped the development of the
Introduction As the topic of what happened at the time the Caravan Park was purchased has recently come up, I thought it would be interesting to see what we have in the Foundation archive files
After focalising Cluny Kitchen, I spent a wonderful year from 1977–78 working with Michael Worth, Ian and Sheila Campbell and the Foundation’s Performing Arts Group. As we made the transition from performing in the tiny
The Community and the Findhorn Foundation have gone through cycles of tremendous change, often triggered by a financial crisis. The years preceding the buying of the caravan park in 1983 represented such a time. In
Click to see whole book As a result of the controversies surrounding the acquisition of property and the distortion of glamour, a number of members left the Community. We entered a
(Editor's Note: François Duquesne in conversation with Cornelia Featherstone 2023) History repeats itself – hopefully in turns higher up on a spiral. In Spring 2023 we are reflecting on a previous turning point in the
The Eighties Building the extension of the Community Centre After the expansion during 1979-80 with the purchase of Cullerne House and Gardens, the acquisition of Drumduan House, and the caretakership of the