Jack Morgan wrote:Are you buying completely undeveloped land? If so what housing type do you intend to use, what's the water source, power source, and bathroom plan?
Are you planning on buying the property yourselves or are you looking for more people to contribute ?
Also are you open to having livestock?
Thank you for your response (and for the up vote) strangers! So maybe people are reading this, cool.
We would love that kind of land but we are presently looking to just rent a place, get a sharehouse together, at first. This to test drive our community before we commit to land ownership together. Sociocracy looks like an appealing next step from anarchy/meetings.
Our plan is to build adobe and maybe have more than one building.
The water source in the desert is a very big deal. This hasn't been a discussion yet outside agreements that we all desire clean water attained the best way. The water bubbles up strangely, some of it with arsenic naturally in it, carbonated, not great to drink. Distilling at the very least through sun evaporation would be a good start but it's a pretty big discussion. Jim Reich of "Sedona Oasis" community I believe has a well and he's just outside Sedona.
Power is ideally minimal and powered enough with just solar but nobody in the community is completely opposed to grid power. Sedona Oasis is more the pioneer (bioneer?) while we are trying to be a middle way.
Compost toilets are the plan so far. Nobody seems opposed to that yet.
We would love more people to contribute because they realize their goal is the same as ours: helping artists like us save money and live lightly in beautiful environs instead of pouring it into an exploitative for-profit place. We want to be a community hub, a friendly place that gets along with neighbors despite our living a bit different from the norm. No plans for livestock as far as I know. I can ask the others. We'll have a poodle, but no plans to milk her.
I thought of something else that may be helpful to mention. I think our stand point crosses with Permaculture ideals as well as coming primarily from a place of housing justice (intersects with Permaculture greatly I think). Land has become more and more elite and only seems to be getting worse, and we'd like to be an example that it's possible to not only go that direction, but also share together, and do so with reverence for the Earth.