Our tree decorates herself, although I do like to add the felt ornaments I made a few years ago of some of my favourite birds! Our beautiful Pōhutukawa and her manu
Just a wee hobbit living in our offgrid diy hilltop cottage home 🏡
Our tree decorates herself, although I do like to add the felt ornaments I made a few years ago of some of my favourite birds! Our beautiful Pōhutukawa and her manu
Thank you! This is great!
The hardest part has been navigating the egos of people on local community council but we now have enough of us that we will be pushing for governance changes so like consensus decision-making, co-chairs and collective leadership.
I think it’s really important to learn to delegate and to be open around ideas that might be different than yours but will still address the problem.
As far as having a community hub space, it’s just as great as you can imagine! We get to go for grants or fundraise if there is something in the community we think we need. Things that don’t really make sense for just one person to own. One of the things we would like to get in the next year or two is a good laser cutter. As people started coming for mend-it nights, they started to see all the neat things we have that they can borrow and hear us talking about community. I think giving people a 3rd space that offers both social support and financial support in the way of items they might not be able to afford to buy has really helped people feel that sense of stability. Stability really is the key to progress! Once people feel safe, they can give more energy to their passions and their community.
10/10 would recommend
Hey we are doing this exact thing! My mates and I have been expanding our community toy library into a community workshop and library of things. We’ve started with textile repairs but are working on grants for our new bike and electronic repairs section. We are also offer a space for small social enterprises to host courses. So far I really do agree that having the social aspect helps more people into the space and opens them up to the idea of sharing vs owning.
We live in a small rural village in Aotearoa so we’ve been lucky that we are able to make such a direct impact on our community. We’re hoping to become a model community and put together free resource packs so we can help everyone else start doing the same.
One thing I would really love to hear more about is time banking. It’s something we’d like to try here but we want to see a few examples in action so we can decide how we’ll set ourselves up.
It’s a Pōhutukawa 😊 I live in Aotearoa, so it’s summer for us.