A Conservatory for Wales
Posted: 18 Oct 2005, 03:53
This thread is for those interested in helping to develop a community somewhere in Wales.
It asks for some primary considerations to be declared, such as the following -
Are you looking for a commune of likeminded well-intentioned people, such as turned into ghettos and failed by the dozen in the seventies ?
Or are you looking to serve, learn from and integrate with one of the existing dispersed rural communities, such as they are in Wales ?
Do you see the need to build for more than merely our own survival, so as to be able to contribute to society's wellbeing overall ?
If you're used to making a living in the country, then for how many years have you done so ?
How many years experience of a practical sustainable production skill do you have, or are you learning one at present ?
Ditto for non production skills (eg astronomer, midwife, lawyer) ?
Do you have financial capital that you'd want to invest in land and/or accomodation ?
Are you willing to learn to speak Welsh ?
Do you play any musical instrument ? Acoustically? And how well ?
Do you have enough respect for country people to reconsider any contempt for say their foxhunting, their chapel and their opposition to wind turbines ?
How fit and healthy are you, and do you have dependants as an enduring motivation in life ?
This is by no means an exhaustive list of the sort of questions we need to ask ourselves if we are to fit in happily to a rural community in Wales.
I hope others will add further items as and when the thread progresses.
____________________________________________________________
I should perhaps explain that my own interest in Wales is many-fold -
though I've lived in England and (one winter) in Scotland as well as in Wales, the culture and the land of Wales appeals to me most -
this may be because I've 3 grandparents who were Welsh with the fourth being from N Devon stock, so I've a tribe of Welsh cousins of assorted degree -
Wales has substantial upland areas of very low population that once supported many peasant-farmers, and could again if ever planning consent could be gained -
It has very good rainfall and (Gulf Stream allowing) an increasingly mild and productive climate and, for the most part, relatively clean winds coming in off the Atlantic.
It is the only nation in Europe where the expression "Fair play!" is commonplace, and singing is a national pastime.
If anyone cares to post their responses to the questions above, then I'll gladly post mine, but I guess I've said enough for the mo.
Billhook
It asks for some primary considerations to be declared, such as the following -
Are you looking for a commune of likeminded well-intentioned people, such as turned into ghettos and failed by the dozen in the seventies ?
Or are you looking to serve, learn from and integrate with one of the existing dispersed rural communities, such as they are in Wales ?
Do you see the need to build for more than merely our own survival, so as to be able to contribute to society's wellbeing overall ?
If you're used to making a living in the country, then for how many years have you done so ?
How many years experience of a practical sustainable production skill do you have, or are you learning one at present ?
Ditto for non production skills (eg astronomer, midwife, lawyer) ?
Do you have financial capital that you'd want to invest in land and/or accomodation ?
Are you willing to learn to speak Welsh ?
Do you play any musical instrument ? Acoustically? And how well ?
Do you have enough respect for country people to reconsider any contempt for say their foxhunting, their chapel and their opposition to wind turbines ?
How fit and healthy are you, and do you have dependants as an enduring motivation in life ?
This is by no means an exhaustive list of the sort of questions we need to ask ourselves if we are to fit in happily to a rural community in Wales.
I hope others will add further items as and when the thread progresses.
____________________________________________________________
I should perhaps explain that my own interest in Wales is many-fold -
though I've lived in England and (one winter) in Scotland as well as in Wales, the culture and the land of Wales appeals to me most -
this may be because I've 3 grandparents who were Welsh with the fourth being from N Devon stock, so I've a tribe of Welsh cousins of assorted degree -
Wales has substantial upland areas of very low population that once supported many peasant-farmers, and could again if ever planning consent could be gained -
It has very good rainfall and (Gulf Stream allowing) an increasingly mild and productive climate and, for the most part, relatively clean winds coming in off the Atlantic.
It is the only nation in Europe where the expression "Fair play!" is commonplace, and singing is a national pastime.
If anyone cares to post their responses to the questions above, then I'll gladly post mine, but I guess I've said enough for the mo.
Billhook