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ESC volunteering in 2022

Cycling to Boodaville

ESC volunteering in 2022

We are looking for 1 volunteer for Boodaville Caseres - 3.5 months in our rural site from 1st Sept - Xmas. This is a funded placement for youth with the European Solidarity Corps.
Boodaville Caseres – ESC project 
WHEN?

The activities take place for 3.5 months in 2022. Starting the 1st Sept

We are looking for 1 more International volunteer from Europe.

WHO?

This is a placement for participants with a maximum age of 30 as it is funded by the European Solidarity Corps. We are looking for people who are highly motivated to learn and apply Permaculture, who are responsible and have an interest in nature and outdoor activities. Applicants should have good communication skills and be ready to live in a small community. They should be prepared for quiet village life and able to travel between the village and the Boodaville site by bike or walking.

We also invite participants with fewer opportunities.

WHERE?

For 30 hours a week volunteers will be at Boodaville, a developing rural permaculture centre in the Matarranya region of Spain. Visitors learn about effective & sustainable design techniques in a place with challenging climate conditions.

Boodaville started in 2008 with the purchase of 1.5 hectares of olive terraces and pine forests in a stunning, tranquil location. Over the years, many people in an ever-growing international community have become involved and we’ve learned about, and applied, permaculture design during the development of the site.

The long term goal is to create a working example of permaculture principles in action and create an eco-education centre with plenty of space for workshops and courses.

Volunteers will live in rented accommodation in the small village of Caseres,

Caseres is a rural village about 3 km from the demonstration site of Boodaville. It is a small village of about 300 people located next to the Algars River where you can bathe. 

See more about Caseres here : http://www.caseres.altanet.org/

WHAT?

Looking after the Boodaville permaculture site, helping with events in Boodaville and beyond, learning about rural living and networking with likeminded people.

WHY?

This European Solidarity Corps program is an opportunity to make something for you and for the world. All basic living expenses are covered as well as the expenses to travel to Caseres, and you receive monthly pocket money. 

You will be living and learning ethical design, as well as experiencing life in a rural Spanish village. There are all sorts of possible day to day activities, please read the infopack for more information  and if you are eligible you can start the application process by filling in this form.

APPLY HERE BEFORE 23 JUNE!

Interviews for shortlisted applicants will be held via zoom between 24th and 26th June.

Boodaville Barcelona – ESC project Treasure!
WHEN?

A 12 month contract starting in January 2022.

(Application deadline 10th December 2021)

WHO?

This is a placement for participants with a maximum age of 30 as it is funded by the European Solidarity Corps. We are looking for people who are highly motivated to learn and apply Urban Permaculture, who are responsible and have an interest in ecosocial transition. Applicants should have good communication skills in Spanish as there will be networking and social media tasks. They should be prepared to come to the Poble Sec neighbourhood to work at least three days a week.

WHERE?

Volunteers will live in, or close to, Barcelona and will work in the Poble Sec neighbourhood to create regenerative projects. They will work in a variety of locations including co-working spaces, the offices of collaborating organisations, urban gardens and outdoor public spaces. 

WHAT?

January will be a month of observation, planning and training, after which volunteers can implement projects they choose ranging from: organising events and workshops promoting ecosocial transition, implementing permaculture design in the Poble Sec neighbourhood, communication tasks for Boodaville, collaborating with existing organisations on publicly funded projects, creating the project “Permaculture Poble Sec”, helping the Boodaville Association grow by engaging young people and sharing opportunities. 

There are many opportunities for independent work, as well as roles collaborating with exisiting groups. There are also opportunities to be involved with permaculure networks across the city and at a regional, national and international level.

Volunteers will work closely with Anna Louise Gurney the coordinator and mentor for this project

WHY?

This European Solidarity Corps project is an opportunity to engage in promoting ecosocial design with long-term effects in a city neighbourhood. All basic living expenses are covered as well as the expenses to travel to Barcelona, and you receive monthly pocket money. 

You will be living and learning ethical design, as well as experiencing life in an urban neighbourhood. There are all sorts of possible day to day activities, please read the infopack for more information  and if you are eligible you can start the application process by filling in th

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permaculture

2018 EVS Volunteering Project

Volunteering

2018 EVS Volunteering Project

In 2018 we invited two young people, as part of the European EVS programme to come and do volunteering in Spain. See their experiences and videos here!

2018 “Living and teaching Permaculture”

4th October 2018

Review from Jessica (her first ever blog post – when she was here as an EVS volunteer in 2018!)

I’m back in Boodaville. It’s great to be back and follow the rhythm of nature to guide our days. I miss that in our everyday society. It’s very interesting to see how my fellow Boodavillians have changed in the 2 months I’ve been away. They are so free. So confident. In touch with themselves and taking life day by day. It makes me realise how I have changed the last 2 months too. I adapted to life in our modern society again. Guided by the clock and appointments and my mobile phone. It is amazing how I bounced back into society life. Now I need time to bounce back in nature’s rhythm. The rhythm I prefer.

I’ve been doing various projects since I’m back. Redoing the insulation on the veggie fridge, making a functioning hay box (we need to find a new name for it… Aggelos suggested sheep box as it is insulated with wool now, not with hay). We lit the rocket stove we made this summer for the first time. It didn’t go very well, there was smoke coming out everywhere. Jordi, who is in charge of this project, calmly started to repair and showed me how I can make the best fire. He announced me the fire master. I’m also trying to bring a leather chair back to life by using the tools we’ve got. I love being creative. I keep surprising myself with the skills I never thought I had. I’m even learning Spanish. It’s hard to believe that I arrived only last week. So many things I have learned already.

Often we swim in the river and it’s not as pleasant as it used to be this summer. These days its more… refreshing I’ve got to say. And therefore  getting in the water is turning into a challenge. I keep telling myself that it will make me strong and resilient. That works well so far. I wonder how long it will last.

23rd December 2018

This beautiful reflection is written by Aggelos one of two long-term volunteers this season:

Hello hello, probably for the last time, at least for this year. My EVS project has almost come to an end and it is in these moments when you think you would look back, remembering and reflecting upon experiences. But you don’t do it the usual way, just looking at photos, or wishing you relive some special moments because those moments are gone, they are in the past. That doesn’t mean you forgot about them but that they are a part of you now. You will never forget because you are who you are.

I cannot relate any more to the person I was when I first arrived in Boodaville. Frightened and scared that I had left everything behind, my friends, my family and the security of no change. The very first moments of complete sadness and without any sense of purpose. Looking around I could only see the emptiness and meaningless in everything. It was only when I talked to the people that were with me there about how I felt that I started to grow, to grow inside. No more wondering if I chose the right place, if I made the best decision.

“this was the first step to natural farming and reconnection with the true nature of all things. Because when you realise that the soil in your hand is not just a combination of water, minerals, organic matter and microorganisms but life itself, the essence of meaning, it is then you become whole not as a human but as part of everything.”

Living in Boodaville, in a way that most people would call primitive, can be frustrating and limiting at first. It is the mindset of the modern human, the prison in which he was born in not able to see the bars that would bring about his lust for escape. Letting go is the key for accepting the unfamiliar, the different.

After I got used to the facilities I learned to love them. Pooing and peeing in the ground to return the nutrients back to the earth, washing dishes with minimal water and soap, being aware that everything will end up in the soil, the element keeping as humans and a lot of other creatures alive. Even washing ourselves was done with the minimal impact on the surrounding environment usually in the close by river. As for our house, it was made out of stone walls and a green roof. The addition of a rocket stove, a very weird looking construction in which the wood burns more efficiently producing more heat which is distributed along a bench, made all the difference during the cold months of October and November. It was the result of team work from scouts, volunteers and the teacher.

In addition to the main house there was an old stone wall house next to it. My first very exciting task was to help rebuild the roof of that house with a bunch of other people also excited to work with natural materials. Bio-construction became something really important and fun for me.

Self-sufficiency is the desirable outcome of permaculture but it takes time to reach that point of a well established ecosystem that supports itself. The task was even harder considering the compacted lifeless bleached and withered soil in Boodaville. Years of ploughing destroyed the top soil and deprived the earth of organic matter and microorganisms. During my time in Boodaville one of my site tasks was to attend the future food forest, to water the trees growing there. But a lot of them died. We suspected that the soil’s compaction was to blame and when the time came just when the rain started we begun the regeneration process. Heavy mulching and planting winter plants such as cabbage, cauliflower, kale, broccoli, dill, artichoke and onions were performed. Sowing rye seeds and legumes as green cover completed the process of helping natural regeneration of the soil. When it was finished I could feel more free as I was thinking that this was the first step to natural farming and re-connection with the true nature of all things. Because when you realize that the soil in your hand is not just a combination of water, minerals, organic matter and microorganisms but life itself, the essence of meaning, it is then you become whole not as a human but as part of everything and nothing.

Our everyday life was as simple as taking care of ourselves but not in the egoistic and self-centered way we are taught to do. We were a community of people looking out for each other, cooking for everyone, working and learning together and supporting everyone when needed. The strongest feeling was that of the solidarity and the well being of the community. Everything was happening because of our determination and interest in building the future we think is necessary for a fair life in which the earth and the people are protected.

This core of people from different backgrounds interacting in an environment of pure cooperation was the result of similar goals and understanding of life. Consequently, the relationships build from our everyday communication and community life imagining the perfect future were like family relationships. The learning process was also quite different. Non formal education was possible because of the interests, diversity of people and their knowledge which allowed us to exchange information about almost everything and realise that you don’t need professors, universities and experts to learn things that are most useful for a life in harmony with the nature around us.

That is the most beautiful part of the story and in the same time the hardest one. When the time came to say goodbye after so many wonderful experiences like sleeping under the stars, playing music, singing, cooking together, sharing stories, laughing and just living the way we did we couldn’t believe that it was over.

I am so happy that I met all these people and so grateful for the time being together. I hope to keep meeting people like them that inspire me to keep fighting for the future I believe in. I will certainly continue searching for them and explore the path of permaculture wherever it takes me.

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Feeling like Spring (On Fridays I write)

Windowsill garden and baby pigeons

Feeling like Spring (On Fridays I write)

Lou, founder of Boodaville has a rant about Brexit then writes about real issues like effective microorganisms, Jadam, windowsill gardening and urban permaculture.

I was wondering what to write today, and had BBC 6Music on while I took some photos of our little gardens here in the flat in Barcelona. 

And now I have to start with a rant after hearing the pro-Brexit narrative “Britain is way ahead of Europe with vaccines” so some of you might get to go to Cyprus on 17th May. I am so sick of the bias news everywhere.. we know Brexit isn’t that great, we know the EU messed up sourcing vaccines, stop this constant media influence to try and make things fit the story the government want you to believe in.

The reality in Spain, for which I am truly grateful, is that we have been living a fairly normal life. We’re restricted to our own districts except for work; but with schools, most shops, circuses, museums open since June (except for a few weeks in November where they closed everything except schools). It is true that we may not be allowed to travel for Easter, and like everyone, we desperately miss easy to access concerts (here you can go with limited capacity and advance booking) and festivals, and mountains. 

But the UK have totally messed up and it is desperately difficult for people to be locked down so severely for so long. The craziest thing to have happened since the war probably, and massively worthy of sensible analysis and news reports. 

Anyway that’s all politics. People are amazing, resilient and resourceful, we will find our way and keep looking after each other.

I’ll end on a joke: On the way home from our weekend of planting and grafting at Boodaville I commented that one great thing about the restrictions is that there hasn’t been any traffic at all for 6 months, and Fraser said “There you are then, more positives from Coronavirus than there are from Brexit”

Now I’ve  spent nearly 300 words on COVID and Brexit, I should, by my own guidelines, spend 600 talking about Ecosocial Design and addressing issues related to climate breakdown and ecological collapse which,  although more long-term, are undisputedly more important.

Jadam

I am finally getting very very close to the end of the Regenerative Agriculture course from Planeses. The official end date was 6th January!!

While I have never been that excited about compost (I love the ideas from the Wheaton/ Klassen-Koop book that say “bury food” which is what we do at Boodaville!!), I am excited about what feeding your food forest can do. Natural fertilizers and effective microorganisms are an amazing input to boost the ecosystems you are regenerating. You do need a lot of barrels, and we still haven’t found out where to get “molasses” or “suero de leche” near Boodaville, but I think for the future of productive agriculture in the Vall Rovira, and based on the experience form Marc at Planeses, this could be a great project for 2021. In this short video I make some fairly unfounded conclusions about our observations in the food forest!

The system I was learning about is Jadam, I love the idea that you should mix into the fertilizer organic matter from the same plant that you are trying to grow. It makes sense thinking about natural systems! Preparing mixes of effective micro-organisms will be an amazing practical project for Sanilles on our “Regenerative Cultures” training in June!! A deadline to get the materials together, a budget, and a chance to actually learn this — by DOING!

Gardening in barcelona

I have finally made a pigeon proof garden with herbs and lettuces. The second windowsill is cherry tomatoes and strawberries, plus baby pigeons – can you see them in the picture? And we have rebranded the “shitty patio” and are now calling it the “shady garden”. Here I plant anything that will, or might, grow without any direct sunlight. (Basically anything that grows in the UK jaja) but very little food. The straw bale mushroom farm project didn’t get realised… this year.

The top flat on the new building next door has a HUGE terrace. I was thinking about lemons, and thought maybe we could offer the neighbours a lemon tree for the terrace in return for sharing the harvest.

This motivation to produce anything we can right here, comes very much from watching Kiss the Ground, and wanting to take any steps possible towards a diet that REGENERATES, imagine if we can improve ecosystems by eating!!

Has anyone got a lemon tree that needs a new home?

this weeks crazy ideas and new stuff

The best part about this feature is that I look back at previous posts and build and reflect on them. I changed my weekly organisation so Mondays is house and personal (mobile off!); Tuesdays is project management and accounting (Now until 8:30 pm thanks to our new babysitter and my Tuesday re-location to a coworking space!!!!); Wednesdays is Boodaville site and Rovira Regenerativa; Thursdays is Website and Poble Sec projects; Fridays I write and learn, and work on education projects. Perfect. Not too much is it?

Moving on from last week: We have potential volunteers (but you can still apply until tomorrow!), we haven’t moved forward with social media strategy, although have a new collaborator who wants to make documentary style videos for us! He may crush my budding youtuber career. (How sad for everyone)

I got all excited about offering a workshop on water at my kid’s school, Abel continues to be very excited by Biochar and we have a free workshop in Poble Sec on 21st March. I’m developing the office in Poble Sec idea, we could go all in and find premises that would be accommodation for 2 Barcelona based CES volunteers and a classroom and an office! Dream BIG!!

Then I realised that the process of identifying the needs for Boodaville, and Rovira Regenerativa gives very clear roles that need to be filled, so these dream volunteers would have plenty of work in return for getting their BCN living expenses paid. Let’s bring this down to concrete requests – do you know any premises for reasonable rent in Poble Sec? Do you know any hostal owners that are looking to diversify income streams? Also, we need an accountant (again).

Maybe the volunteers can run the podcast! 

See you next week!

Let’s Connect and Regenerate!

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ESC Solidarity Projects with Boodaville

ESC Solidarity Project activity - Akasha Collective

ESC Solidarity Projects with Boodaville

Boodaville supported two Solidarity Projects with the European Solidarity Corps in 2020 - This post shares all the amazing activities they ran, under very difficult circumstances. They are now working together as Akasha Collective with more activities programmed in 2021.

How Akasha Collective Spread Love and Inclusiveness in 2020

The story of how a small collective navigated restrictions and change in their quest to encourage personal wellbeing and supportive communities

One winter night at the beginning of 2020, in a dimly-lit apartment located in Barcelona, a group of young people were gathered around a coffee table. Coming from various nationalities, backgrounds, and mother tongues, the biggest idea on their minds was creating a collective that would empower the community and encourage a stronger sense of wellbeing and personal growth in all of us. And so, Akasha Collective lay written on the main pages of what they thought will be a year full of face to face events and personal connection.

The values that kept us going

We knew from the beginning that we want to heal through creative expression, movement, and community. We were on a mission to befriend the environment and encourage everyone to be a part of its entourage. We share a vision of unity and progress through personal development, emotional reflection, education, and support. 

We believe in healing the self to heal the world. 

When 2020 turned out to be in dire need of care and affection, we didn’t hold back from these values. We met online and decided on how to continue the project and work for the community, who was feeling restless and worried. The events and achievements were a result of an open-minded and loving community. The solidarity projects of Colectivo Inclusivo and Bienestar en la Ciudad were the collaborative driving force of Akasha Collective.

The Healing of Our Collective

In person

Barcelona, the abundant, multicultural city we lived in, suffered on and off restrictions throughout 2020. We felt lucky that summer provided more opportunities to organise events outside. We organised and took part of :

1.The historical march for the “Black Lives Matter” movement in Barcelona

2020 was historical not only because of the COVID-19 pandemic, but for the uprising opposing racial inequality as well. We fully affirm and support this movement and marched in solidarity with so many others. This was a powerful and meaningful way to strengthen and connect with the community, as well as open the doors to many important conversations, events and actions.

2. Jam sessions with Culture Creativa in Parc de Ciutadella

Along with Chanti, the founder of Culture Creativa and our Akasha Collective mentor, we collaborated with the association to support the jam sessions every Sunday. The Jam Session was an open-mic cultural celebration which brought poets, artists, families and strangers together in unity and love. Surrounded by art, poetry workshops, vegan food and good vibrations, we were honoured to be a part of such an uplifting event and keep our community’s spirits high.

3. Photography skillshare Sessions

Our very own Nicola Falcinelli organised several community skill shares to teach the basics of analogue photography and encourage us to tune into the power of storytelling coming from photography. His passion led him to learn how to print using the cyanotype technique from the 18th century, which he also shared with the community in a small workshop. Nicola’s photography of the Black Lives Matter march was printed using this technique and displayed in a free art exhibition in Ciutadella Parc. The park was a hotspot for bringing people together during this challenging year.

4. “Little gardens” (Petit Jardinets) activities in the Poble Sec neighbourhood 

What better way to repay the environment than plant a new life? We collaborated with Boodaville and Trocasec associations in the barrio of Poble Sec to plant little gardens in the spaces outside some of the houses on Passeig de l’Exposició. We used recycled wood and hand-painted signs and contributed the plants, which some of the local children helped us to plant. This was a beautiful way to brighten up the street and give the gift of little gardens to the community, who in turn maintained and added plants. 

In-person workshops

Throughout the summer we were able to organise some (COVID compliant) workshops. Instead of being indoors, we gathered outside where possible for creative events such as Blackout poetry, Power up Poetry (Poetry for activism by Chanti) and hosted cosy women’s circles. It was important for us to create a safe environment for people to express their concerns or feelings about both their inner world and/or external surroundings.

1. Photography Exhibition in Atelier Guell

Following the photography skillshares and after witnessing the effects of the global pandemic on the city we call home,  we documented this using street photography. The creative process of simple street documentation by new and keen photographers was used to create an exhibition which also shared Nicola Falcinelli´s work called “Vida” . The exhibition highlighted some of the more deprived areas of the city and the effects of the pandemic, as well as shone a light of hope through effective storytelling.

Online

When the weather wasn’t so bright or we were asked to stay home, we turned to the screens in order to foster the community and create safe spaces for expression. We:

1. Held Online Women’s Circles 

Women’s circles celebrate a safe and courageous space in which women can reflect on, plan, and share their values, experience, doubts, and much more. With every full or new moon, we would meet for a couple of hours. One of the greatest aspects of online circles is that women from all over the world can join, thus extending our collective’s impact even further than the limits of Barcelona. We ‘held hands’, meditated, danced, wrote and shared our feelings, healed past wounds, spoke our truth, and shared love with our sisters. 

2. Yoga for Social Justice Workshop

Vianna, the creative and spiritual mind behind the project, held this safe space every week for 1 month. A 4 part series of weekly workshops where we explored themes of identity, inequality, racism, discrimination, privilege, justice, and how we place ourselves along these values. We combined self-awareness with breathing techniques, mindful movement, and aligned our actions with our beliefs to encourage self-care for sustainable activism and social change. The course will be re-run in the future for those who missed it.

3. Maranya Festival: Online Edition

Collaborating with Maranya Festivals online initiative to continue to spread the message and connect with our online community during lockdown. We got together to live-stream a series of workshops including meditation, Introduction to Regenerative Cultures with Anna Boodaville, Yoga for Social Justice and live DJ´s!

4. Akasha Collective: Community Skillshare Week

A week full of sharing, education, eye-opening revelation, life-changing habits, and renewed feelings of empathy. Starting with an in-person analogue photography workshop in Barcelona, it continued online with Plateonomics, where our community learned about sustainable eating habits and how to make conscious eating choices. Creatividad Emotional encouraged participants to self-reflect on the creative process using a playful activity, Slow-Fashion Masterclass exposed the truth about the fashion industry and what we can do about it. Finally, Lucid Dreaming gave the collective tips & tricks on how to take control of our dreams and the week finished with an in-person Women’s Circle held by Vianna. 

Moving forward

2020 may be close to ending, but we are nowhere near that. We will continue the work for healing through creativity, justice, and community. We still hold safe-spaces for women and minorities, we continue to educate on environmental issues and sustainability, we share feelings and take meaningful action towards a sustainable future for all. Our next move is launching the Akasha Collective Zine, where we keep everyone up to date with our work, as well as share useful information surrounding our values. 

Should you want to become a part of the Collective, join us on Instagram or send us an email at helloakashacollective@gmail.com.

The light in us honours the light in you. 

Thank you for reading and Namaste!

 

Let’s Connect and Regenerate!

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