Richard Eurus

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since Feb 20, 2024
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If you'd be willing to consider moving to the Ozarks of Missouri, you might want to check out East Wind Community.
If your route takes you through the Ozarks and you're interested in visiting a large, 50 year old intentional community, you could come through East Wind Community. PM me if you're interested and I could host you for a short visit (the contact info given in our website is more geared toward those interested in longer visits and potential membership). I manage the gardens and there's a lot going on in late summer. We're using Landrace Gardening methods to breed more adapted strains of crops for our conditions.
Hi Samantha,

Thanks for your interest. It is a more complicated process to visit East Wind with a child, as child branch has to approve it as well as membership. Personally I think it would be great to have a few more kids here, but I'm not making decisions for child branch.

Since you're at least somewhat local, possibly ww could arrange a shorter visit if it doesn't work to go through membership/child branch. I'll send you a PM with my email address.
I posted to the Going to Seed Forums some summer photos of the gardens at East Wind Community in the Ozarks of southern Missouri. Each year, we are breeding and selecting more crops to adapt to our local conditions. East Wind Community is a 50-year-old intentional community that currently has around 50 people living here and is accepting applicants for new members. Landrace gardening is only one of many projects going on here.
East Wind Community is an intentional community in the Ozarks of southern Missouri that has been around since 1974. In fact, we're going to be celebrating our 50th anniversary this spring. We have over 1000 acres of land, and currently around 50 members living here. We have room for closer to 70 members, so we're open to more potential members. Those interested in membership need to come for a three week visitor period and be accepted by the community, the process of which is described in detail on our website.

East Wind is an income sharing community, with most of our income coming from our business, East Wind Nut Butters, which is a small factory operation where nuts are roasted and milled and made into nut butters to be sold. Members are expected to work in our industry at least a modest amount, as it's what pays the bills, but one of the advantages to our communal structure is that much of our time is available to work on our internal domestic projects which include a lot of permie type stuff going on.

East Wind has two main garden areas as well as orchards and an agroforestry area. We have animals including dairy and beef cattle, pigs and chickens.  The majority of our land is forested. Some of our forests are managed through selective cutting to get lumber (we have a sawmill) and firewood. The less accessible areas are left to be wild. Our garden projects include an increasing amount of seed saving and plant breeding using landrace methods, as well as a project to grow and propagate chestnut trees. We also have two herb gardens for growing both culinary and medicinal herbs. Homemade herbal products such as tinctures, salves and dried herbs are made available for community use. The animals are managed using rotational systems. Our agriculture and forestry are mainly for internal use as it's the nut butter business that is the main income source (the nuts for the business are not grown here), but 50-70 people eat a lot and everything we can obtain from our land is less money that we need to spend, as well as having a quality that would be hard to get otherwise, and also increases our resilience to supply chain issues and other potential disruptions. I should say that we're not close to fully self sufficient. We're on the grid and we do buy plenty of stuff, but there is lots of potential to further increase our self-sufficiency for any member who is willing to put work in to do so.

The Ozark region has lots of opportunities for outdoor recreation. Woodlands, caves, springs and clear rivers abound. Float trips are popular during the warmer seasons. Be prepared for plenty of heat and humidity in the summer. Winters can get cold briefly but usually don't stay too cold for very long. Snow rarely stays on the ground for more than a week. We are pretty remote, so if you need to be close to a city this probably isn't the right place for you.

It generally works best for new people who have both self motivation and a willingness to help with things that the group needs. Visitors get orientations covering many of the important things but then have a lot of freedom to figure out which areas of community they work best in. Everyone is expected to work at least a modest amount of hours for our industry though as that's needed to keep the community going. Jobs like cooking community meals and cleaning communal spaces are also labor creditable work.

People come to East Wind for many different reasons. Growing food and working with the land was one of my major reasons, and we do attract a significant amount of people with those interests. However other people are here for other reasons. Ask ten East Winders the same question and you'll get eleven different answers. So, if you're someone who insists on ideological purity, East Wind probably isn't the best fit. If you bring skills or even just enthusiasm and willingness to participate and learn, things are likely to go well, and you're likely to have the opportunity to be involved and eventually initiate (if you so choose) plenty of cool permie projects. However, if you come with an attitude that you know what's best for everyone and we should all just do things how you think they need to be, then things are not likely to go too well for you.

Feel free to ask me any questions on this thread, but please read our website first because many of your questions will be answered there.