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2013 Calendar
Midwifery Herb Workshop May 16-18
Regenerative Earthworks May 16-19
Midwifery Workshop - Common Sense and Tradition May 19-23
Community & Sustainability Conference May 24-26 Explore the connection between lifestyle and intention.
Ecovillage Apprenticeship, June1-28
Organic Gardening Intensive
June 2-8 or 6-8 A week (or weekend) Hands-on gardening plus garden tours on and off-The Farm to visit Shiitake operations, a bamboo nursery...more
Swan Trust Creek Walk June 9
Carbon Farming - Albert Bates, June 21-22
Midwife Assistant Workshop June 16-22  
Adobe Dome Building Workshop July 2013
Carbon Farming with Albert Bates, Norway July 5-7
Ecovillage Apprenticeship, July 9-Aug. 3
Advanced Permaculture Design July 11-14
Buffalo River Canoe Trip July 21
Swan Trust
Farm Experience Summer Retreat
July 24-28 or 26-28 (weekend only) Fun for the entire family. All of the Farm Experience workshops plus activities for kid,. swimming, hiking...more
Fermaculture, with Sandor Katz July 27
Midwife Assistant Workshop July 28-Aug 3  
Permaculture Design with Albert Bates, Ireland, Aug. 9-18
Advanced Midwife Workshop Aug 25-31
Midwifery Workshop - Neonatal Resuscitation Aug 27 - 28
Biochar Stove Camp Aug. 30-Sept 3
Regenerative Earthworks September
Farm Experience Weekend Sept 20-22
Midwifery Assistant Workshop Sept 22-28
Edible Forest Gardening Sept. 27-29
Ecovillage Apprenticeship, Oct. 1-28
Farm Experience Weekend Oct. 11-13
Our last Farm Experience till next year!
Farm School Holiday Bazaae Dec. 7
Belize Adventure Feb. 2014
Hikes in the jungle. Home stays with Mayan families. Visit Plenty relief projects. Contact for details.
 
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Tennesse History for Kids: The Farm - 2010

The Farm In 1970 a group of around 300 young people left San Francisco in a caravan of school buses and traveled across the country looking for a place to call home. Because of their clothing, hair length and lifestyle, these young people were regarded by many people as hippies -- and the "hippie caravan" made big news.

After a journey across America, they settled in Lewis County, Tennessee, and started their community, which they referred to as "The Farm." For the next few years it was mentioned in books, newspapers and television news shows as the "largest" and "best known" commune in America. At "The Farm," everyone was welcome, given a place to sleep and food to eat. But they were also given a job to do, and if they didn't want to work, they were asked to move on.

In terms of Tennessee places, The Farm is in some ways comparable to Rugby; the Cumberland Homesteads or Ruskin -- all attempts by people to build a community based on different rules. But there is one big difference between The Farm and the other three places (which were all shortlived). Founded in 1971, The Farm still exists, though under a different setup than first established. Today its residents refer to it as an "intentional community," and life on The Farm is still different than anywhere else in Tennessee.

At its population peak, about 1,200 people lived at The Farm. At that time The Farm was still run as a commune, which means that all possessions and income were held by everyone who lived there. The Farm had a communal dining room, a motor pool, a laundromat and its own crude phone system. The people who lived there became adept at everything from how to fix a car to how to find and install a big water tower.


The so-called "Hippie Caravan" heads through California
PHOTO: The Farm

When The Farm was first created, residents there had to build everything from scratch, including their plumbing system. Click here to read an interesting first-person account of what they learned through this process.

But in 1983, The Farm was reorganized. Today the 1750 acres are still owned by the community, but the 170 people who live there have their own things, including their own homes. People who live there either work at outside jobs or have employment with one of the many small businesses that operate there.

The Farm also has its own school -- a small, K through 12 private school attended by children who live there and some who live nearby. In typical Farm fashion, it was built with an environmentally friendly design -- with huge south-facing windows that maximize solar heat in the winter.

The Farm School also reminds us that, over the years, hundreds of children have grown up at The Farm. During its days as a commune, The Farm unofficially "adopted" many children; in fact, The Farm had a general policy of accepting all babies, children and teenagers who were left at its doorstep.

So what's there to see at The Farm? The first thing to point out is that this is not a national park or a museum. In some ways, coming to The Farm is like visiting any other small community -- most of the time, people are just minding their own business (unless you visit during a so-called Farm Experience Weekend -- click here to learn more about this.) Nevertheless, The Farm does have a few things that other small communities don't have. Since the entire place is private property, it has a gate and visitor's center, where we were greeted by a friendly woman named Vicki.

Once you are admitted to The Farm, you might enjoy a trip to the Farm Store, which sells some health food items you might be surprised to find at a place so remote. Beside the store, you'll find a structure unlike any you've ever seen -- a steel dome that towers over a small playground. In the early 1980s people who worked at The Farm moved this steel from abandoned buildings throughout the surrounding counties and welded this structure together. We were told that they never quite finished it, but it looks impressive nonetheless.


A recent high school graduating class from the
Farm School PHOTO: The Farm

Keep your eyes pealed while you move around The Farm, because there's a lot more than you might realize. Among the more interesting operations at The Farm today are a radio station, a dairy that produces soy milk (click here to see where you can buy it), a book publishing company and a midwifery operation (where women come to deliver babies). In fact, the advancement of midwifery as an accepted practice is one of The Farm's contributions to Tennessee law; a few years ago, a representative from The Farm successfully lobbied the Tennessee General Assembly to pass a bill recognizing the practice of midwifery.

The Farm also serves as headquarters for a few non-profit organizations. The biggest of these is Plenty International, a relief organization started by Farm residents in the 1970s, when a devastating earthquake struck Guatemala. More than 100 volunteers from The Farm went to Guatemala and helped rebuild hundreds of homes, schools and government buildings, passing on much of what they had learned during their experiences at The Farm. Today, Plenty International remains active in countries such as Guatemala, Belize, Mexico and Liberia. And here in Tennessee, Plenty's "Kids To The Country" program brings children from homeless shelters and refugee centers to the peaceful refuge of The Farm where they have the opportunity to do things like swim, ride horses and pick blueberries.


Residents weeding at The Farm in the 1970s
PHOTO: The Farm

Also at The Farm you will find the Ecovillage Training Center, where people come from all over the world to learn about alternative building methods and earth-friendly living. Speaking of things you won't find very often -- at the Ecovillage Training Center you will find a house made of straw!

But, in case you are wondering, the one thing that you really won't find at The Farm anymore is a farm. Although many residents still keep vegetable gardens and tend to a large blueberry patch, the large collective farm on which people worked so hard in the 1970s is long gone. At The Farm, most of the buildings are in the woods. The wide open fields contain a soccer field, a frisbee golf course, and the rest of it is a big nature preserve.

Speaking of nature preserve: Another Farm-related organization is the Swan Conservation Trust. The Swan Conservation Trust has enabled about 1,400 acres next to The Farm to be set aside for hiking and nature loving. This land is very close to Stillhouse Falls -- one of the many great waterfalls that you can find on Tennessee's Highland Rim. So if you come by The Farm, check out the falls!


One of many old school buses that
you'll find parked at The Farm


The Dome


Plenty volunteers in Central America serve "ice bean,"
which is a desert made from soybeans
PHOTO: Plenty International


Douglas Stevenson, a resident of The Farm,
shows off the Ecovillage Training Center's straw house


The interior of the Farm Store


Stillhouse Falls

 
Complete story and photos

 

 

 

 

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