It sounds like a great idea to me.
If you are able to structure it into a weekend/after school program, there might even be a way to help get funding for it. There would be plenty of upkeep, but perhaps you could use that to help kids get a sense of responsibility and ethic.
Nice to see Pagans out there working to help others!
2007-01-05 19:01:18
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answer #1
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answered by qamper 5
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My recommendation would be to make sure you have a solid business plan first. You don't mention how much farm experience you've had, but if you have little to none you're going to have a lot of mundane work ahead of you before you can reasonably start your program. Keep in mind, too, that you'll have a lot of equipment to buy--a tractor at the very least, and depending on what sort of roads you have you'll need equipment for maintaining them (gravel is most common, and it requires periodic maintenance).
Once you have your farm, I would suggest spending several years just working on the farming end of it. Is this going to be your primary form of income? Are you going to need to plant crops and/or raise livestock? How goo dis the soil? What sort of fertilizers will you need? What condition are the fences in? Are there any natural predators such as coyotes that might steal calves or lambs?
And the other issue is time. Will you have the time to manage an entire farm plus the educational aspects of it? Will you need to pay people to help you out? And, I hate to say it, but from my own experience, the pagan community won't be enough to cover the expenses--just not enough people.
You might consider turning it into a campground for pagan festivals and the like--that way you're primarily just caring for the land itself rather than crops or animals. You can still do an educational center on the land if you like, and still offer day tours to school classes and such.
You may want to consider contacting the owners of various pagan festival sites like Blackwater Campground and Brushwood Folklore Center to get an idea of just how much time and money is involved. Your general idea is a good one, but I think you need to do more planning; it sounds like this is a rather recent idea (though I may be wrong) and you need to have a more solid plan before going any further.
Good luck :)
2007-01-06 07:09:14
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answer #2
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answered by Lupa 4
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The Easter element is _mostly_ bunk. Christians celebrated a trip they referred to as the Greek artwork for passover for hundreds of years in the previous Christianity got here to the British Isles. the reason in the back of it somewhat is basic. Christ grew to become into crucified on the 1st day of passover, and rose on its third day. Then Christians began to rejoice that on the Friday and Sunday that coincide with it. Now it somewhat is genuine that once St. Augustine of Canterbury got here to Britain, that he accepted the close by inhabitants to call the Paschal dinner social gathering "Eostre" (a cleric named the venerable Bede documents this) which grew to become into an unlucky selection. yet understand, that through the time this occurred, Pascha were celebrated for 6 hundred years already. Even to this present day, this truly continues to be an English-in basic terms difficulty. In all different latin languages, the awareness for the dinner social gathering is a version of Hebrew's observe for passover, "pesach" - pascha, pasqua, paques, and so on. those different languages signify maximum of Christendom, and latin-language human beings could surely scratch their heads in any respect this "eostre" stuff which does no longer stick to to the holiday because it somewhat is named of their languages. and then for sure, there is how Christians rejoice Easter - with reenactments of the enthusiasm, right now out of the bible: no longer precisely the element you will assume from a borrowed holiday, does no longer you're saying? in no way the 1st element i think of of when I hear the lines of "Christ the Lord is risen as we talk."
2016-11-26 23:25:43
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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So you got the farm with --- $ and how would you teach respect for animals and the earth? What about teaching respect for their elders, figures of authority, something like that? Just wondering, can you explain these things for us?
2007-01-05 18:57:02
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answer #4
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answered by desertflower 5
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Depends on what you're going to do with the farm. Are you going to raise livestock for milk and meat? Are you going to grow and harvest crops? That's what you do on a farm.
2007-01-05 18:51:57
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answer #5
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answered by Roman Soldier 5
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you sure should do it if your really comitted if you have doubts be sure before you do anything major like that
sounds likea good idea for your people.
anyways tania s ive heard you had bpd do you still take medication?
do you have any symptoms of bpd?
how long did it take you to get better from bpd?
please answers these questions im realy scared
send it to this emal address ghelle_3@hotmail.com
2007-01-06 23:51:25
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answer #6
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answered by musti 1
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It may be your devine purpose, but it's a pretty stupid business model. Better pray to your gods or you'll be bankrupt within a year.
2007-01-05 18:54:15
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answer #7
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answered by ZenPenguin 7
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I think it's a wonderful idea. Let me know if you need any help. Have shovel, will travel.
2007-01-09 03:02:28
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answer #8
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answered by kaplah 5
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If that's what floats your boat, go ahead.
2007-01-05 18:50:53
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answer #9
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answered by Weird Darryl 6
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