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Posts Tagged ‘vermont’

Cultural Integration in Vermont

Friday, July 18th, 2008
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Vermont Public Radio carried a news magazine about how intentional communities interacted with the surrounding rural culture in Vermont.

The program description states,

Our guest Tom Fels of North Bennington has just published a book on the network of communal farms that he was part of in northwestern Massachusetts and southern Vermont. Also with us is poet and teacher Verandah Porche, who still lives on the farm in Guilford where she settled with her counterculture friends in 1968. Together we examine how the commune movement shaped, and was shaped by, Vermont's culture.

Fels's book is distributed by Chelsea Green.

Both Fels and Porche talked about how there was a shift in local attitude toward the new communities as time passed.  I am not clear on whether these were income-sharing communities per se, or cooperatevely run houses and farms.  Porche notes in the interview, "in fact, it was the press who referred to us as a commune".

Porche also was able to observe changes in their acceptance in the local communities over time.  A close farmer's fraternity, Vermont Grange, once turned away members of her community, but now accepts them.

Listen to the full story here.

 
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Community News Round Up

Friday, May 2nd, 2008

A lot of news about communities comes my way and its hard to pick and choose what to highlight on Community Buzz. Today, nothing stood out so I figured I'd do a round up of some news thats been languishing on my list but didn't seem quite enough for its own story.

Ithaca has a new community in the works, Farm Pond Circle, and they are already getting press in the Ithaca Journal for planting trees on their new community land. Obviously folks in Ithaca know about community and must be interested in whats new in their area.

The AP Wire put out a story on how many people are choosing to have only one child and they have quotes from folks at Tryon Life Farm community in Portland.

The local paper in Worcester, MA has an article highlighting the new cohousing communities in the Worchester area. They highlight Mosaic Commons and Camelot Cohousing but also have a nice map of cohousing throughout Massachusettes.

Champlain Valley Cohousing was in the Burlington Free Press in an article about the farm they have on site. The 22 unit cohousing community has a 25 acre farm on its land that works as a CSA and sells to wholesalers.

The Portland Oregonian had an article about Columbia Ecovillage, a community developing in Portland that started as a farm and sustainability education center and just bought the adjacent apartment complex with plans to convert them to green living cohousing. See photos on the Oregonian blog.

Then there's all the reviews of the movie Mister Lonely that is about impersonators (look-a-likes of Michael Jackson , Marilyn Monroe, Charlie Chaplin, etc.) who come together in a commune in Scotland. The kicker is that according to some reviews filmmaker Harmony Korine spent some time as a child "on a commune near Nashville, TN". Most likely The Farm but there are many communes in the Nashville area.

 
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Green Mountain Communes Profiled on Indy Media

Monday, January 14th, 2008

Indy Media of New Hampshire has a great article on a variety of communes in the Green Mountain area over the past few decades.

Read the article.

 
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Burlington Cohousing in dispute with neighbors

Sunday, December 9th, 2007

Residents at Burlington Cohousing East Village are moving into their new units but are dogged by an unresolved issue with their neighbors about the sale of a buffer zone between them and neighboring single family homes.

The article does a good job of presenting the dispute fairly and gives a nice montage of life in cohousing. I got a smile out of this quote from one of the neighbors:

"One of the problems is there is no one in charge." Cohousing's "corporate structure dictates that everything (including a resolution of the land dispute) has to be decided in meetings, and they have to have a meeting to decide if they're going to have a meeting," Keller said.

Read the article

 
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Communes in Vermont shape its culture

Monday, October 1st, 2007

This article appeared in a collection of small papers in Vermont (http://www.rutlandherald.com, http://www.timesargus.com). They mostly talk about 60s communes but they acknowledge that a lot of intentional communities still make Vermont their home. Quotes from Wavy Gravy and Diana Christian.

Here's a good quote on how communes affected Vermont:

But while nearly all the original Vermont communes and communards have vanished, their legacy remains in the state's green movement, farmers markets, food co-ops and alternative-energy pioneers. Arguably, much of Vermont's current character stems from its commune days.

 
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