Rainwater Collective

  • Community
  • 2 followers

About the Community

  • Disbanded
  • Rural

What we do

The dream of the Rainwater Collective is a regionally appropriate, regenerative lifeway that improves the soil, removes carbon from the atmosphere, puts water back in the aquifers, reconnects us with each other and the Earth and builds cooperative culture and a network of resilience among our friends and neighbors. We are deeply committed to permaculture, appropriate technology, antiracism and antioppression work, compassionate and skillful communication (including conflict transformation and restorative justice), and nonviolence. We’ll have a high level of interdependence and resource sharing- community kitchen with shared meals every day, shared community garden, barn, sauna/bath-house and small individual or family dwellings. The community is entirely off-grid, with a small solar system, and we rely on rainwater rather than a dug well.

Rainwater is an aspiring “ecohamlet”- the goal is 10-15 people stewarding 17 acres, in collaboration with a network of other small communities and permaculture homesteads in the Piedmont bioregion.

Founder’s statement:
Rainwater occupies the ancestral land of Occaneechi, Saponi, Eno, Tutelo, and Shakori native peoples, farmed and stewarded by several subsequent generation of Black farmers whose access to land was then systematically undermined (90% loss) in the last century. My (Rachel’s) ability to originally purchase the land and access to the resources to found the community is inseparable from the many advantages conferred on me by white supremacy. As a community currently founded by two white people, we aspire to participate in multiracial, multigenerational efforts to address these traumas by engaging openly and vulnerably in conversations about race, class and power within the community, by exploring opportunities to participate in material steps towards decolonization in conversation with Occanneechi stakeholders, and by weaving a reparational lens through our relationships with the wider community. In particular, we are committed to a model in which community members who benefit from whiteness return a portion of their time and energy towards local BIPOC-led projects.

Key values: ⦁ Spreading hope through lived possibility ⦁ Designing for resilience ⦁ Gratitude and gift economy ⦁ Nurturing relationships ⦁ Dismantling systems of oppression ⦁ Nonviolence and right use of power

Our Vision

We envision a world in which humans live regeneratively in cooperation with the ecosystems of which they are a part, in which culture supports our connection to each other and to the land, and in which a web of community and ecological resilience grows stronger even as the “old story” of global industrial capitalism is crumbling down around us.

Our Mission

We envision a world in which humans live regeneratively in cooperation with the ecosystems of which they are a part, in which culture supports our connection to each other and to the land, and in which a web of community and ecological resilience grows stronger even as the “old story” of global industrial capitalism is crumbling down around us.

  • Community type
  • Ecovillage
  • Commune
  • Activities
  • Education
  • Others
  • 6 Total members
  • Open to new members
  • Open to visitors
  • Open to volunteers
Total
6

How to join

Step 0: Reach out and introduce yourself by email, then by phone

Step 1: Visit, wwoof, get to know existing members

Step 2: Provisional membership (all rights of full member except can’t block or own land)

Step 3: Associate membership (all rights of full member except don’t co-own land)

Step 4: Full membership, full participation in decisionmaking and co-own land

Basic expectations or agreements for members

Please contact us by email to introduce yourself and let us know a) what your interest is in Rainwater (membership vs. woofing, see below) and b) what your past experiences in community have been, if any. We will exchange a few emails with information and then we would like to talk on the phone and get to know you.

We are interested in getting to know folks who might join the community, in a role somewhere in between co-founder and joining member. We also enjoy hosting visitors who are not necessarily looking to join the community, but would like to learn about living off-grid. Wwoofing is a great option for folks who are curious about intentional community, want to learn about some of things we are doing on the land, or just want to have an interesting adventure! You can learn more about our wwoofing program here: https://wwoofusa.org/user/930826. We welcome wwoofers of all ages, backgrounds, and ability levels, with a particular emphasis on those who are interested in longer-term stays. Wwoofers live at Rainwater, participate in day-to-day decision-making, and work 20 hours/week in exchange for lodging and food.

In terms of eventually adding long-term members to the community, we are most interested in considering folks who have lived in community before or who have substantial experience with consensus governance in the context of activism or other collaborative projects, or who grew up in a strongly interdependent/collectivist cultural context (e.g. many BIPOC individuals).

Primary decision-making authority

  • All Community Members Together

The whole membership decides collectively.

Governance structure

  • Collaborative/Horizontal

Power and responsibility are shared relatively equally among members.

Economic model

  • Complete Income-Sharing

All member income goes into common pool for community use.

Economic scenarios for this community

  • Members need to pay fees, dues, or similar to live there on a per month or per year basis
  • There is a labor obligation

Additional economic information

Monthly fees/dues: Yes (amount not specified)
Labor required: 40 hours/week
Members with pre-existing debt: Yes
The community is mostly income-sharing: members contribute a fixed amount weekly (40 hours?) that includes both paid work and community labor. A small allowance is provided by the community, and members can do additional paid work if they have money needs not met by the community. Shared by the community: gardens, tools, shared kitchen and almost all food, barn, bath house, out house, most dwellings, cars, healthcare. Typical member will work part-time, keep both income and expenses low, have a meaningful and fulfilled life outside the money economy.

Shared resources and amenities that are accessible to everyone in the community

Common House, Garden(s), Vehicle Share, Library, Workshop, Outbuilding(s), Hot tub or hot springs, Outdoor Kitchen, Large Scale Kitchen, Fire pit, Swingsets & play areas

Frequency of communal meals

  • Approximately all meals

Substance use culture

  • Substance use appears in public spaces but no pressure
  • Religions
  • Buddhist
  • Wiccan, Paganism, or Earth Religions

Property status

  • Privately owned

Property owner

  • By a Land Trust, Home Owners Association, or corporation

Setting

  • Rural

Countryside locations with significant distance from urban centers.

Self-produced energy

  • Over 66%

Energy sources used

  • Photovoltaic Solar
  • Biomass (from wood or other organic materials)

Self-produced food

  • Up to 33%
  • Land area size
    17 acres

Reviews

Location

  • North Carolina, United States

Rainwater Collective

Promoted Needs and Offers

Need
  • Communities with Openings
5 months ago

Join us in the mountains of Western North Carolina

Coweeta Heritage Center/Talking Rock Farm is located in the mountains of Western North Carolina. Coweeta is located in a beautiful and diverse temperate rain forest. It feels very remote here yet we are just 12 miles from Franklin, NC. Winters can be mild. Coweeta is blessed with springs and a stream, pristine forests, and abundant wildlife. Power is provided by a hydro-electric system which is not connected to the grid. An organic garden and trout pond provide healthy food that is also shared with the local community. Hiking, kayaking, and other outdoor activities are just out the back door. Coweeta is looking for others who would like to join together to form an Intentional Community embracing the principles of Voluntary Simplicity. Simply put (no pun intended): We wish “to live simply so that others may simply live.” It is a recognition that nature provides us with valuable services and resources that we can use to enrich our lives. Utilizing local resources, appropriate technology, and working cooperatively, we can discover creative ways to meet our needs as “directly and simply as possible.”. An example of this, in the tradition of many Indigenous People”, is to gather, and use wildcrafted foods as part of our diet. There is great joy in going to nature’s grocery for our sustenance. Voluntary Simplicity is based on the recognition that “very little is needed to live well” and that “abundance is a state of mind.” Living lower on the economic ladder allows us more time and freedom to pursue other life goals: community and social engagement, family time, artistic or intellectual projects, more fulfilling employment, political participation, sustainable living, spiritual exploration, and more. According to the Voluntary Collective, “The grounding assumption of Voluntary Simplicity is that all human beings have the potential to live meaningful, free, happy and infinitely diverse lives while consuming no more than an equitable share of (the world’s) resources.” We affirm the need for a work/life balance, the right to a healthy environment and healthy food, and healthy community relationships supporting a diverse population. It is our responsibility as engineers of a new generation to make the changes that we want to see happen and pass this on to the next generations. We can’t wait for someone else to do this important work. Voluntary Simplicity is a quiet revolution that can change the world. As one person said, “we must be poets of our own lives and of a new generation.” We hope you will join us here at Coweeta or elsewhere on our journey to a healthier and more sustainable future! Temporary housing is available in a 27 foot trailer trailer with attached deck next to a creek while we build additional housing. Your basic living expenses (shelter, basic food items, power and water) are met through our market garden or other fundraising projects that you will participate in. You are expected to contribute a given amount of your time and energy to help grow our community and meet our financial obligations. Possible future plans include establishing a retreat center for healing our earth and each other. Work includes organic gardening, construction projects and other community building activities. Come join Coweeta and learn how to live lightly on the land and enjoy the Earth’s bounty! For more information, visit www.coweetaheritagecenter.com Contact [email protected] for a visit or more info.  Paul
Need
  • Communities with Openings
12 months ago

Water Birch Co-op. Urban living in central Denver.

Large, lovely house built in 1900, two blocks from Cheeseman Park in downtown Denver.  5000 square feet. The house was a Buddhist Meditation Center for 20 years before we got it and has lovely, calm vibes. We currently have ten people and have room for one more. We are an intentional community sharing dinners, 3 living rooms, 2 new kitchens and a kitchenette, & 5 baths. Staple food (organic) is bought together. The group is self-regulating as a co-op; it decides together how the house runs. There are chores ;-) Average cost per room is about $1000 ranging from $650 to $1354. Currently available room is $875. We are just finishing renovation of three bedrooms on the third floor  they are $875 each and share our largest, newest bath (shower and separate claw foot tub) and a brand new kitchenette  they all have beautiful windows and lots of light. PLEASE CHECK OUT COMMUNITY LISTINGS FOR MORE INFO. Initial lease for 3-6 months while we and you decide if we are a good fit for each other.  Deposit in the amount of one months rent is required prior to move in.  We do background checks on all members. Utilities are currently $130 per person per month and are all-inclusive.  They will change if costs go up, that amount is insufficient to cover utilities, or more people mean the cost per person goes down.  WiFi is via mesh network from gig-speed fiberoptic service.  Heat is with radiators.  Cooling is evaporative.  We have a storage room in a nearby commercial facility.  And a new large workshop in the garage. Shared food is $125 per month per person; it is a pass-through cost divided evenly among residents; it does NOT include meat or alternative protein nor any alcohol.  We will not be surprised if that needs to go up some soon ($10 or 15). We have two dogs and three cats in the house  that seems like a sufficient quantity of furry friends for now. Our community intentions include: Communication with compassion. Shared space and life. Shared meals. Shared staple foods which are non-GMO and Organic. Group decision making. Safe, inclusive space: queer and trans friendly, anti-racist, non-violent, and feminist. The purchase of the house by the co-op in about five years. The expansion of the co-op, possibly to include other housing types (like separate apartments). Weekly meetings and house committees to manage our community. We are considering implementing Sociocracy as an organizing method. Quiet hours are from 10:00pm to 8:00am. We are looking for community members who: Want to live in a community not just have a place to sleep and eat. Want to live in a beautiful, clean, and organized house and are willing to help make and keep it that way. Residents should expect to spend 16 hours per month towards this goal. Are curious, compassionate, flexible, and open to living with others who will undoubtedly have different ideas about many things. Are interested in pioneering a new co-op. There will be work involved to get there. Are responsible and communicative. Embrace enthusiastically that living in community requires introspection and personal growth. Are not joining the community as a way of running away from something.
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