Wednesday, July 20, 2011

16th Buddhafield Festival closes to rave reviews

The annual Buddhafield Festival, held in the beautiful Blackdown Hills of Somerset UK, drew to a close early this week to rave reviews. We’re delighted to post a few below, drawn at random from Buddhafield’s Facebook page - www.facebook.com/buddhafield.festival

“what a mind-blowing experience it was to be present at my first and definitely never last Buddhafield. I thank you from the bottom of my being, big love to everyone who worked so hard to create this oasis of real and passionate living....bless you all xxxxxxx”

“Best and most inspiring week of my life”.

“Just back from 5 days of bliss, fun, freedom, beautiful deep connections in the best festival I've ever been to! My heart is overflowing with LOVE and Gratitude. That was my first time at Buddhafield and certainly not my last one!

“Thank you for a truly amazing festival, it was my first time at Buddhafield and I will certainly come back next year. It was full of amazing people and I have returned overwhelmed with inspiration and abundance xxx”


At almost 3,000 people, the Buddhafield Festival is Triratna’s largest annual event and distinctive in the UK’s vibrant festival scene for its clear ‘no drink no drugs’ emphasis. The theme this year was ‘Finding Abundance’; this was reflected throughout the festival and indeed Buddhafield’s whole 2011 program. They write “How important it is in these times to evoke a brimming energy of fulfilment, inner wealth and joy that supports us and overflows outwards towards others. In the light of credit crunches, cuts, peak oil and a general air of belt-tightening and lack, we thought we’d go right the other way... We will be working hard to create a richly adorned beautiful space for you to come to. Bring your jewel hearts!

This was the 16th Buddhafield Festival with the team celebrating an unbroken run from 1996 - itself a notable achievement in the fluid world of alternative culture.

Sadhu Buddhafield!


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Wednesday, June 29, 2011

The 2011 Buddhafield Yatra - an account

Triratna’s Buddhafield project does all kinds of things over their long summer season - retreats, festivals, cafes, and land management.  At the time of writing, many of their core team are deeply immersed in a month-long silent meditation retreat - which will finish just in time to prepare for the annual 3,000-person Buddhafield Festival!  Their previous retreat, however, was an unusual event, and Lokabandhu sends us this report -

“The highlight of last month was, for me, the Buddhafield Yatra.  I thought it was totally great, it’s unlike everything else we do in Triratna and I would like to share an account of it with you - if anyone wanted to organize one themselves I’d be more than happy to advise.

“In essence a Yatra is a walking retreat; over 7 days 30 of us walked 60 miles, from Reading train station (an easy place to get to for the start) to Avebury (a vast megalithic complex dominated by the great stone circle: a fine place to finish).  It’s a walk, but with a distinctive etiquette: we walk in silence, in single file, each hour of walking beginning and ending in a circle, with any words from the leader (or others, who might, for instance, have a poem to share) followed by everyone bowing to one another.  The leader then leads off in a spiral, walking around the outside of the circle with everyone following.  Behind the leader is a map-reader; at the rear is a backstop who ensures no-one gets left behind.  Two vehicles, a van and a run-around car, stay with the day’s team of about 4 people; they tat-down the previous night’s camp, do the shopping, go ahead with the luggage and set up the next night stop, cook dinner, and welcome the weary walkers as they arrive.  The car is available to pick up anyone who can’t walk the full distance.  The roles all swap around, everyone plays their part.  Morning and evening there’s time for meditation, Dharma talks, reporting-in and Puja or other rituals; the silent walking is of course mindful and an excellent way to practice Bhante’s ‘Four Levels of Awareness’. 

“All that by itself would be enough to make a great event, but Yatras are much more too.  Five aspects especially struck me this time - the landscape, the elements, the rituals, the community, and the journey back in time.   The walk took us along the River Thames and up onto the Ridgeway, a 5000-year-old trackway across the high dry ground of the Wiltshire downs.  Water gave way to Earth, Fire warmed us at night, Air buffeted us as Consciousness walked though Space.  For me this was a delight, a week away from computers simply immersed in the present moment and our surroundings: big skies and big landscapes led effortlessly to ‘big mind’.  It wasn’t all easy: we were fully exposed to the elements, even by Buddhafield’s minimal standards.  At night, the only shelters were our tents and an awning hung off the side of the van.  While walking, the only refuge was to be mindful of (and hang loose to) our experience rather than resist it.  And we had weather in abundance - hot sun, strong wind, driving rain, blue skies, cold nights.  Happily none lasted too long - we could see for ourselves that all things passed, the Three Laksanas held true…

Almost every night we camped at one or another ancient monument or hillfort, giving a wonderful backdrop to a series of improvised rituals.  The first evening we started with the Dedication Ceremony, but thereafter took off into realms of creativity. Morning by the river, with rain threatening, saw a ‘baptism’ by Air and Water, based on a Biodanza exercise; that evening another by Fire and Earth - specifically, building and jumping a fire in the woods.  The next morning, finding ourselves next to Scutchamer Knob, an ancient collapsed burial mound, we surrounded it and one by one approached the shrine in the centre of the amphitheatre-like space holding a Vajra, shouting our names to the wind, declaring our intentions for the day’s walk - to “walk with confidence, sensitivity, etc”.  And off we went…  At Uffingdon, on Dragon’s Hill at sunset, in the howling wind, we recited the Ratana Sutta and met, tamed, and befriended our Demons, this time calling their names into the wind.  At Waylands Smithy, an ancient tomb in a beautiful beech-tree grove, we began what came to be several ceremonies connecting us with our Ancestors - those unknown people who first walked the Ridgeway and built (with stupendous labour) the many special places we were passing. 

“We used verses and pujas by Dhiramati, to whom I’m profoundly grateful; he has such a gift with words and poetry.  We began with his verses ‘To the Ancestors’; that night, by a fire in a field under the starry sky, his beautiful puja to Tara and the Elements.  In the wide open space of Barbury Castle Akasaka led us in the Amoghasiddhi mantra and offering our intentions (symbolized by flower petals) to the wind.  By this time Reading train station seemed a million miles and several thousand years away!

“Approaching Avebury, our destination, for two nights our only campsite and kitchen was the public car park and grass verge by the track: happily we were undisturbed.  We’d tried and failed to find a more orthodox campsite for this part of the walk; it was clear how we as Yatrikas had in a sense gone forth from the regular world and (rather like the Buddha and his followers) been forced to take our chances night by night. 

“Soon after our arrival we embarked upon an all-night vigil inside West Kennett Long Barrow; some 25 of us crowding in with almost 20 staying till dawn. Akasaka and I had drafted a seven-round ritual, recapping and building on the many ceremonies already performed.  Each round had several stages, for instance the first, ‘Connecting with the Ancestors’ consisting of a welcome talk by Sean (a Druid as well as a Buddhist); entering the Barrow; creating a shrine and finding our places; Dhiramati’s 'Verses to the Ancestors' and 'Spirit Song'; the Ratana Sutta and an offering of one sunflower seed each inside the chamber; and finally the Aksobhya mantra and earth-touching mudra. The other rounds were ‘Setting our intentions for the night’; ‘Evoking our potential’ (verses and mantras to Amoghasiddhi and Tara, ending with extinguishing all lights and holding hands in the total darkness); ‘Confession and Acknowledgement of Regrets and Limitations’; ‘Aspirations and Next Steps’; ‘Rebirth and Re-emergence’ (in the first light of dawn); a ‘Retreat Metta and Transference of Merits’ and finally the recitation of Kalidasa’s wonderful 'Exhortation to the Dawn' at sunrise at 5.06am.  Followed by the long walk back to our camp and sleep!  The next day saw us end the Yatra by walking the mile-long Avenue into Avebury and reporting-out among the stones - and meeting Terry Dobney, Arch-Druid of Avebury and Keeper of the Stones, for a formal welcome into and most fascinating tour of the site.


“Probably not surprisingly, we were a pretty strong community by this time, even though we’d all spent many hours in silence, simply walking together.  Certainly we’d all lived though an adventure together, ably facilitated by the excellent Buddhafield team.  For me, it was a great combination of a simple and elemental life, a whacky adventure, and a serious contribution to our great shared enterprise of bringing Buddhism to the West, even, to re-imagining the Buddha.  I’m over my word count by now so can’t say more; but there’s photos at http://tinyurl.com/684hpdl.

“With metta, Lokabandhu”


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Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Stupa takes form at Vimaladhatu retreat centre

Jnanacandra writes from Germany with news of the Stupa now rapidly taking its final form at Triratna’s Vimaladhatu retreat centre near Essen. She says -

“I'd like to update you on a wonderful project that has been happening at our retreat centre Vimaladhatu (in Germany) over the last 18 months. You might remember that we are building a Stupa that will contain a portion of Dhardo Rimpoche's relics. He was one of Sangharakshita's eight principle teachers and we're delighted to be able to remember him in this way.  It's an ambitious project and has - as those things do in Triratna - continuously grown in size while evolving. It's happening simultaneously in three locations - England, Essen and Vimaladhatu itself...

“Rupadarshin - the creator of the Stupas in Padmaloka, Tiratanaloka and Windhorse - is our most wonderful stone-mason who has been working away in a Buddhafield-style tent-workshop in his garden in Devon/England. The stone he's working on comes from a quarry near Vimaladhatu - Bhante had recommended that we build the Stupa from local stone. This Anröchter Stone has proved very hard and tricky to work. It contains a lot of fossils that look beautiful but have caused Rupadarshin some stress as they make the stone pretty unpredictable.

“At present Rupadarshin is working on the very last stone, the conical top section representing the element fire. It's a labour of love and Rupadarshin is incredibly generous (he's working on a basic support level) and devoted to the project. It's been a joy remaining in contact with him throughout the year via email and following the developments in Devon through the photos he keeps posting on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/album.php?id=644543669&aid=67312 . I have only met him once but feel quite a connection can build up through sharing in a common project of devotion.

“Meanwhile in Vimaladhatu Bodhimitra has been working wonders. In order to create a dignified setting for the Stupa we embarked on a major landscaping venture. The wonderful Sanghadeva came over from Madhyamaloka twice to help us create a vision for this land in cooperation with Amritavacha who finalized the plans and the Essen centre-team who were invited to formulate their dreams in the first place. Vimaladhatu lies on a steep hillside in the woods and the lower part of our land had been unused, overgrown with a slightly sombre feel to it. Now the land has been terraced and partly cleared which creates wide views into the valley and a sense of space and openness. Two diggers spent a week moving great quantities of earth and solid rock last August. Since then Bodhimitra (who lives at Vimaladhatu) and helpers from the Sangha have transformed the hillside into something stunningly different - a sacred space.

“In Essen (2 hours drive from Vimaladhatu) the Sangha has been following the creation of the Stupa and its sacred space attentively. Vimaladhatu belongs to the Essen Sangha and it looks like almost the full costs of the Stupa will be covered by donations from the Sangha. It's inspiring to let energies and funds (crystallized energy) flow freely towards an object of devotion - creating a symbol of Awakening that will last for generations after us...

“Claudia Krüger, a Mitra, created a beautiful full-size Light Stupa for Essen to keep the project present in everybody's minds. Rupadarshin commented that he had seen such things made from bamboo/willow and rice paper before - but never one welded in metal and covered with fabric. We celebrated full-moon Pujas around this Light Stupa in the Centre courtyard in Essen under the starlit sky when it was still warm enough which I found very moving indeed.

“Meanwhile most of the Stupa-stones have arrived in Vimaladhatu and the Stupa has been built up to the water-element-section. This is how it will remain until the inauguration ceremony on 22. May, when Dhardo’s relics will be placed in the relic chamber and then the last stone topped by Chintamani’s beautiful finial will be put in place.

"Take a look at our photos of the project at vimaladhatu.de or visit our Vimaladhatu group on Facebook!

With metta,
Jnanacandra

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Monday, February 21, 2011

On-Line Buddhafield Dharma: part III

In the last of our three-part series featuring essays from the newly-released Buddhafield Dharma Series I, Triratna News brings you three more essays from Order Members in the Buddhafield Sangha.

Khemasuri, in ‘Building an Ethical Underworld’, undertakes a fascinating exploration of the synergies between modern Systems Thinking and the Dharma, asking the question “how can we set up the conditions for change?” Provocatively subtitled, ‘Lessons from the Mafia’, she draws parallels between the Mafia and the Sangha: both originate outside the traditional institutions of civil
Society, and being ‘outside the box’ are not bound by convention or traditional values and behaviour - the difference being, of course, that the Sangha exists to promote what she calls an ‘ethical underworld’ rather than a criminal underworld!
(click here for the PDF version)

Kamalashila, in ‘Community, Nature, and Reality’, offers a set of guidelines for creating effective and satisfying community - which he defines as perhaps the most urgent and difficult challenge facing our individualistic, disconnected world. Significantly, this comes out of his eighteen-month solitary retreat in the Welsh hills, where he discovered that “being close to nature provides wings for my fledgling understanding of things”.
(click here for the PDF version)


Finally, Lokabandhu, in ‘Shouting Out Beauty - listening to the Wisdom of Nature’, explores how the natural open-air settings of Buddhafield retreats provide the perfect - though challenging conditions to explore the Buddha’s classic teaching of the Noble Eightfold Path.
(click here for the PDF version)

Buddhafield Dharma Series I is a collection of on-line essays exploring Buddhafield’s approach to the Dharma and its application of the Dharma to the great issues of our time, both individual and collective.

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Sunday, February 13, 2011

On-Line Buddhafield Dharma: part II

Last Sunday Triratna News began a three-part series featuring essays from the newly-released Buddhafield Dharma Series I, a collection of on-line essays exploring Buddhafield’s approach to the Dharma and its application of the Dharma to the great issues of our time, both individual and collective.

Our second instalment features three more essays -click any of the title links to read on-line with Issuu.

Myth, Poetry and the Goddess, by Dhiramati, is a passionate and evocative call to follow him and simply “give up, relax a little” - and thereby enter a very different realm. As he describes one of his early Buddhafield retreat experiences - “I lay down and looked up into the canopy of trees above me. The light was like brilliant silver shimmering and dancing between the leaves which were illuminated from within and glowing, all swaying in a gentle whisper as the wind breathed. It’s hard to describe but I knew Tara, I wasn’t thinking, but I sensed directly something there in that beautiful place. An unfolding, a presence, alive in nature, singing, calling, to everything, in everything, to me, to my body, my breath, my senses...”  (click here for the PDF version)

Akuppa , author of the much-loved ‘Shambala Warrior Mind-Training verses’ asks us to ‘Strive On’ and offers ‘Five ways to stay Sane and True and survive Global Meltdown’, drawn from the five ethical precepts of Buddhism. He asks us to keep a vision of humanity, give ourselves to community, avoid being implicated in systems that cause harm and division, speak out, and keep the broadest possible perspective - and promises that in doing those things, we survive, in the deepest, fullest sense of the word, and what is most precious about our humanity will not be lost.  (click here for the PDF version)

In 'The Living Elements’ Kamalashila sets out his thesis that seeing what really happens in experience will enable anyone to liberate themselves from ever-present, deeply held assumptions – views that are false and undermining - and that if we could connect much more fully with the basic elements of life, we would more easily cut through the accumulated cobweb of our complex delusion. (click here for the PDF version)

Enjoy!  And look out for Part III (and last) next Sunday...

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Sunday, February 06, 2011

On-Line Buddhafield Dharma: Series 1 now available

Lokabandhu writes from Glastonbury to say - “I’m delighted to let you know we’ve just published “Buddhafield Dharma - Series I. This is a collection of essays by Buddhafield teachers in which they begin to articulate Buddhafield’s special approach to the Dharma; developed over 15 years and more of Dharma teaching.

"Buddhafield’s special approach comes from its close contact with the elements - all their retreats being held under canvas - and the annual Buddhafield Festival, which brings together an unprecedented breadth people active all across the alternative-eco-social-political spectrum in the UK”.

The nine essays are published in an easy-to-read interactive format at http://issuu.com/buddhafield; we’ll be featuring three weekly for the next three Sundays.

 First off this week is ‘On Retreat with Buddhafield’ by Paramananda, well-known for his best-selling books on meditation, in which he skilfully evokes the transformative power of meditating and practicing outdoors.  (click here for the PDF version)

Akasati, the original driving force behind this project, and for many years a key organiser within Buddhafield, follows with ‘Ecology, Buddhism and Buddhafield’, laying out the raison-d-etre of the project: which she defines as the “fertile ground between urgent contemporary issues and timeless Buddhist wisdom”, a dialogue that was able to grow out of the ‘Untamed Dharma’ of the early Buddhafield experiments.  (click here for the PDF version)


Maitrisara rounds off this week’s selection with a beautiful essay entitled ‘Gracing the Earth: Buddhist Reflections on a Damaged Planet’, drawing out the crucial importance of Awareness, deepening into Equanimity - which she characterises as ‘Sustaining the Gaze’, then Simplicity, Energy, Effectiveness, Strength – and finally even Anger. She closes with four possible actions in response to what we see around us: Intervene, Exemplify, Ignore, and Make Magic...  (click here for the PDF version)

Enjoy!

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Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Big Lottery grant for Buddhafield for Forest Garden project

Hannah Phillips, part of the core team at Triratna’s Buddhafield project, writes with news of their latest project - creating a Forest Garden on their land at Broadhembury in Devon UK. She says -

“I'm very happy to announce that Buddhafield has been awarded £10,000 by the Big Lottery Fund Awards For All and I'm not ashamed to admit to shedding a tear (or two!) when I opened the offer letter.

approaching Buddhafield's land at Broiadhembury
“The grant is specifically to create and develop a woodland walkway and a forest garden project at Broadhembury, one of the two pieces of land that Buddhafield owns in Devon. More details on the land are on the Buddhafield website.

"A Forest Garden is a way of planting that mimics young natural woodland. It is developing as an alternative means for producing food and as a method to restore bio diversity. The plants in a forest garden are all of use, directly for food, medicine, basketry, dye and indirectly for bees and nitrogen fixing. A forest garden requires very little upkeep, with the plants and shrubs working together to create the need for minimal human intervention. The woodland walkway will provide access through mature woodland that is best left unmanaged for nature conservation. It will create a nature trail through otherwise impenetrable, marshy land. Rupadarshin, Buddhafield's craftsman extraordinaire will design and build a simple, low impact pathway, using alder and oak, relying on a method used on the Somerset levels 3,000 years ago.

“The grant is based on us holding an event on the land next winter, for a week, with anyone who would like to come and help us very welcome. We are approaching the event from the angle of the 'Green Gym' movement where good mental health has been proven to be supported and encouraged by exercising and working outside. It will be free for volunteers and we're currently researching warm and snuggly places to stay nearby for those who don't fancy sleeping in tents. The funding covers things such as buying two hundred trees, erecting a deer fence, hiring a tractor driver for a few days and buying materials and tools. There is also funding for a few weeks work before the event starts to prepare the land so that volunteers get to do as many of the 'nice' activities such as tree planting , as possible!

deep in the woods - the shrine tent...
“Buddhafield functions on a shoe string, with our retreats run on a dana system to ensure that as many people who want to are able to participate. It means that we don't have any reserves for positive projects outside of our retreats/festival/cafe programme. This grant gives us the opportunity to put creative energy into a really meaningful project and to encourage all those who want to join in to come and be a part of it. Particularly during this time of economic hardship, it feels great to get funding for such a forward thinking and sustainable project. I hope the forest garden project will encourage lots of people to get involved and will be an inspiration for many years to come”.

Hannah Phillips (Buddhafield retreats/fundraising)

Click here for more details of Buddhafield's retreats.

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Monday, January 03, 2011

Buddhafield New Zealand at Prana Festival for 7th year running

Just ending is New Zealand’s annual Prana Festival - 4 days and nights of more than 100 workshops, music, art, dance, and the Coromandel Peninsula’s pristine Opoutere beach for lazing on, swimming and long walks. And for the 7th year running Buddhafield New Zealand have been there with their Buddhafield Dome space. They say -

“The Buddhafield is a zone of natural beauty, where silent reflection, meditation and peaceful exchange provide the festival patron with an alternative counterpoise to the hurly burly of the festival proper. The Buddhafield Workshop Dome dominates the area and is surrounded by various shrines, art installations and a Zen Bushwalk. It is open for discovery both day and night and runs a full program of workshops throughout the duration of the festival.

the Buddhafield dome at Prana
“Traditionally, a Buddhafield is a place of spiritual awakening and awareness and is blessed and protected by the Buddhas of past, present and future. Originally an outreach development of the Triratna Buddhist Community in the UK where a handful of western Buddhists were inspired to practice in the outdoors in harmony with the rythms of nature, Buddhafield UK has evolved into a dynamic spiritual community that operates a large Cafe at various festivals, hosts spiritual retreats and runs its own very successful festival in Devon every summer. Buddhafield NZ has grown out of these origins and is pleased to be manifesting again this year at Prana for the seventh year running...”

If you missed it this year - look out for 2012! Details at www.prana.co.nz.

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Sunday, September 26, 2010

One weekend in July - what happens at the Buddhafield Festival

Back in July Buddhafield celebrated their 15th annual Festival, with over 2,000 people gathering at their beautiful site in the Blackdown Hills above Taunton, Somerset.

Many in the Triratna Buddhist Community come every year - but equally many have never been, and to show them what they're missing Lokabandhu has produced this short video illustrating the extraordinary variety on offer at the Festival - all over a single weekend - from the annual Buddhafield Poetry Slam to Buddhist action at Copenhagen to Dhiramati's all-night Puja - to the Love Angels' Temple of Delights!

Click the embedded video below to play, or find it on YouTube at www.youtube.com/watch?v=eEXuz34Dskk

Enjoy!

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Sunday, September 19, 2010

Forest Garden project in Devon, UK

Prajnaparamita in the Sanctuary
Back in 2008 Triratna News reported on the Prajnaparamita Sanctuary in Devon, created by Sagaravajra and friends. It’s adjacent to Buddhafield’s land at Broadhembury in Devon, UK. Now it’s been extended with the purchase of a second piece of land, this time to create a Forest Garden.

Sagaravajra writes to say -

“Karen, my partner, has recently bought three acres of land within walking distance from the Prajnaparamita Sanctuary which has been evolving over the past five years or so. The vision for Karen's land is to create an 'Edible Forest Garden'. The background and motivation for this project is not easy to explain. However one strand of this for us is finding a response to the pressures that we as humans are so clearly placing on the environment and the other living beings with which we share this world. Some of the issues are brilliantly explored in a Rebecca Hosking's BBC documentary film 'Farm for a Future'  .

“Put starkly, our current methods of food production are not sustainable – we currently use ten units of petroleum for every one unit of food that we eat! It has been said that we don't eat food so much as that we eat oil! The field next door to Karen’s land is intensively farmed, its surface two to three feet below Karen’s land (which has been pasture for many years.) This is an alarming demonstration of how present agricultural practices deplete the top soil – while it has taken many tens of thousands of years of natural processes to build it up , just a few short years can lose it! The methods by which we, Buddhists included, supply much of our food simply cannot be sustained in the long term.

showing the location of the Sanctuary and the new
Forest Garden land
“A system has been developed over the past few decades which we believe is a creative response to these problems: an edible forest garden. Any piece of land in this country will be in the process of becoming a forest, through a process of succession– so-called “weeds” being the first stage in this process. Rather than fighting against succession (constantly going back to 'ground zero', the state which much energy/work in conventional systems is devoted to reaching) in creating a forest garden we try instead 'to go with it' and fast-track towards a mid-succession forest. The resulting forest system has many benefits over conventional systems. By designing a forest of trees shrubs and perennial plants on multiple levels we can mimic the stable, complex, symbiotic, self-maintaining, abundant relationships of a natural forest. However in a forest garden we substitute non-edible/productive species with a high diversity of productive and useful ones: in addition to edible plants we design in other functional plants which work for us. Therefore some plants supply or recycle fertility, others attract beneficial insects, others repel pests, suppress weeds, and so on. Many plants of course can fulfil multiple functions.

“To give an example - a very interesting and little understood component of forest system is the role of mycorrhizal fungi. Mycorrhiza extend as a network throughout the forest soil where they become intimately linked with, and provide an extension to, plant roots. These mycorrhiza become conduits through which minerals and moisture are regulated and redistributed throughout the whole forest, demonstrating how a forest is an interconnected living system with a high degree of self regulation and arguably almost a degree of sentience. Conventional agricultural systems entirely lack these mycorrhiza.

“By designing all of these elements into a complex self-sustaining forest system we are at the same time designing out all external inputs. This translates into less work (and hydro carbons!) for you and me! The resulting effect is a massively efficient diverse and abundant system which is largely self maintaining. The resulting diversity and complexity it can create a very stable system which is resistant to environmental extremes and stresses such as drought and flooding (eg climate change!) pests and diseases - plus being beneficial to the environment as a whole, ie birds and other wildlife. A forest is the only system of agriculture that naturally creates top soil by the production and circulation of a huge amount organic matter. That’s the theory, the challenge is of course putting this theory in to practice

“Over and above these characteristics, for me a forest offers a striking metaphor for aspects of the Three Jewels revered by all Buddhists . A forest is literally a living whole comprising a collection of symbiotically interconnected and interdependent parts and processes – anyone who has ever tried to grow anything knows that we do not make plants, we simply create the best possible conditions and they will grow, as a natural response, of their own accord. Creating a forest garden invites us to engage with the processes of conditionality on a grand scale in a conscious and intentional way.

“I think the creation of a forest garden system mimics the Dharma's skilful attitude to change. Rather than trying to fight and resist change (which is simply another word for succession), with its associated dukkha, we co- operate with it to produce an augmentative complex, creative, dynamically stable, self-maintaining, efficient productive, symbiotic, system. I have known for a long time that for me, the principles of the Dharma need metaphorical as well as physical embodiments and grounding.

“What better way than creating an edible forest within which to interact with the nature of reality on so many levels? Its yummy too!

Sagaravajra

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Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Buddhafield Appeal - be one of the 150!

Triratna’s Buddhafield sangha are nearing the end of a packed summer program of retreats, festivals, cafes, and children’s events.  Along the way they’ve been concocting a great fundraising scheme to help them pay off the £35,000 they still own on their new land at Frog Mill, 17 acres of gorgeous land in Dartmoor National Park.  Simple really - get 150 people to do something they’ve never done before and fundraise £200 each.  So they’ve been asking everyone they meet  “Could you be 1 of the 150?”

And now they write to say - “Dear friends, it's happening!  All of the below have committed themselves -

Dhiramati raised £800 on an all night puja at this year’s Buddhafield Festival
 Paul Chauncy raised £400 cycling from London to Frog Mill, recording an album on his travels
K. has run a half marathon and raised £200
H.D. has raffled a bushcraft course and raised £475 | P.V. donated the proceeds of his massages on the family friendly retreat | S. donated £8,000 (wow!) | K. (and seven others) each donated £200 | L.B. and  V.  are running a half marathons
S. is knitting | D. And S.T. are abseiling
K.,K., C. and N. are swimming, running, making cakes and felt
H.P. and  L.S. are walking 40 miles between Buddhafield's 2 pieces of land
S. is cycling the South Downs way
K. is donating the royalties from his book on meditation
and more - 
R.H. is massaging | M. is selling his computer and donating the proceeds | V. is stilt walking on Dartmoor | Z.H. is making, then auctioning a beaded bodhisattva | A.S. is doing a painting | C.B. is doing a slack rope walk | VJ and J. are doing a triathlon | G.C. is doing acupuncture | K. is busking | J.J. and R.R. are holding a musical evening | Padmapani is doing a disco | C.T., J.H. and family are sending a toy bear and diary around to friends | V. is holding a musical evening in West London | A.M. is doing a 24 hour piano D.S. is doing extra midwifery shifts | J.H. is holding a dance night | L. and R. are having a 24 hour cake bake and sale | V. is doing an all night reading of The Life and Liberation of Padmasambhava | T.M.  won’t buy anything for three months | L. D. has pledged to do something with food | A. (and 16 other people!) have pledged to raise £200.

Hannah from Buddhafield writes to say - “They are doing this to raise money for the Buddhafield Frog Mill land appeal. Are you looking for an excuse to do something you’ve never done before? Could you be one of those people sharing your skills, passions, creativity and talent to help Buddhafield? You can join the above in their heroic tasks by setting up your own JustGiving page at www.justgiving.com/buddhafield 

“Suggestions for activities include walks, runs, silences, gigs, meditations, hair cutting/shaving, pilgrimages, dances, comedy nights, plays, frog hopping (for kids!), marathons/ half marathons, fashion shows, cake sales, jumble sales- ANYTHING- as long as it’s ethical!  

"Once you’ve made a page, let your friends on Facebook, MySpace, Twitter and Bebo know what you’re up to and get them involved too.  If you're not computer literate, do it the old fashioned way getting sponsors with pencil and paper!”

Buddhafield hold their big family friendly and open summer retreats on Frog Mill. It cost £85,000 and they’ve done very well to pay off over £50,000 - but that still leaves £35,000 to go. It has a salmon spawning river, the Blackaton Brook flowing through it and is home to kingfishers, dippers and a host of other wildlife. They have plans to let natural regeneration create more woodland and to clean and tidy up the mill area this winter. 

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Saturday, July 24, 2010

Buddhafield Festival photos now on-line

The 15th Buddhafield Festival ended a week ago, with some 2,500+ people gathering in Somerset’s Blackdown Hills for a long weekend of ceremony, meditation, Dharma talks, debates, healing, permaculture, music, social change, sauna, children’s stories, films, good food - and much much more...

We’re hoping to bring you the Dharma talks as soon as they’ve been uploaded to Buddhafield’s page on FreeBuddhistAudio , but in the meantime can’t resist sharing with Triratna News’ readers some of the photos and comments from the event. Click on the dragon for photos from Royston Naylor’s Facebook album.

The video below is from the 2009 Festival, happily this one wasn’t quite so muddy!  Thanks to Brian VizionDance for putting it together.



Thanks also to the Buddhafield Festival’s many Facebook fans for their comments, copied below. No festival is perfect, and this one featured unexpected gale force winds on the Thursday night, just after almost 1,500 new people had arrived on site for the weekend!  More at www.facebook.com/buddhafield.festival.
  Dear wonderful festival lovelies, Thank you so much for making this year's festival so wonderful. I witnessed such joy, warmth and support. There seemed to be a collective shift after the storm, where we seemed to come together in a richer and more real way, which really embodied the sense of community I believe that's what we're all striving for.






Lisa Lennon  This Buddhafield was so beautiful. People at their best. Stunning and inspiring. Love to all there. X
Joanne Soulsby  It was beautiful ! My first buddahfield and I loved it! Love and thx to all. Xxx
Helen Wakefield  My first Buddhafield was amazing! Lots of love to all the people I met xx
Tony Amendola  Wonderful wonderful place
Kate Leppard  I agree! The festival was truly magical, incredible and beautiful. I learnt so much and hope to bring that learning out into the world. Thank you!
Rebecca Bart Stubbs  loved it x
Tony White  This was the best festival I have been to for years- many thanks to all involved- see you next year!
Lynne Clarke  My 7th time at Buddhafield - already looking forward to my 8th! Rain or no rain!
Joely Hayes  Wonderful as ever, but what ever happened to the farewell fairies that used to wave people off with love and heartfelt smiles.. all shattered I guess.. should some freshfaced ones be hired for the occasion I wonder?
Jennifer Ray  My first too! And absolutely beautiful! Thanks so much to all you warm and sweet people. Here's to the next!
Chatter Box  First time for me too - and it was amazing!! Thanks and gratitude to all those that made it happen xx


Another fantastic festival yet again, thank you : ) Was Satyajit's talk recorded, if so will it be going on Free Buddhist Audio? I hope so, it was deeply stirring and very inspiring.x

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Tuesday, July 06, 2010

Buddhafield Festival coming up soon - last chance to get tickets!

The 15th Buddhafield Festival is coming up soon, and following a successful presence at the Glastonbury Festival, their publicity machine is in full swing! They’ve written inviting all members of the Triratna Buddhist Community to “5 days of uplifting, life transforming workshops and talks, along with a whole array of live music, dance, meditation teaching & radical discussion”.

They go on to say -
“As always, we hope to infuse it with our heartfelt wish to bring joy, connection and nourishment to all that comes to the field.

“This year we’ll be using the theme ‘A Force for Good in the World’ to explore the origin of our name ‘Buddhafield’.

More specifically, this year, we have our well known favourites:
* The Dharma Parlour * Opening and Closing ceremonies * Mahasukha’s 'Soulful Singing' * Jayaraja’s Adult Games * Jewl’s Ecstatic Dance * Heart-to-Heart Tantric workshops * introductions to Joanna Macy’s 'Work that Reconnects' * Non-Violent Communication * and a great deal more...

“But this year we’ve got plenty of new stuff too! There’s the much loved Adam, veteran of the legendary Lost Horizon Sauna Cabaret, leading ‘The Art of Taking Yourself Less Seriously’ workshops (now why would he think Buddhists need them...?) ; Vajralila and Sudakini exploring ʻFeeding Your Demonsʼ (workshops pioneered by American Tibetan nun Tsultrim Allione); the all-day Wild Woodland Interactive Gamelan coming to the festival (where creators Annie and Simon use natural materials to create a unique variety of percussive instruments allowing both children and adults to play alongside each other); and finally the wonderful Swamp Circus and their very big tent - where they’ll teach all manner of circus skills such as Acrobatics, Acro Yoga, Trapeze, Rope, Balancing, Stilts, Unicycle, and Tight Wire.

“Please accept our invitation and come and join us for a really special Buddhafield festival 2010! If you haven't been before - check a review from last year below...

Tickets available on-line via the Buddhafield website www.buddhafield.com/?festival=booking.  But don’t forget - when they’re gone they’re gone!

"Buddhafield is as close... so far... as you are likely to come to a perfect community of beings living and celebrating the way we all know we should be. We all know how and at Buddhafield we are reminded of that. No drugs and drink leave the air and the smiles as clear as crystal. .... Its small, its pretty, its clean..... Thank you Buddhafield, from the bottom of my heart for giving me this gem again. I could carry on with more descriptions of how the magic in this field left me gleaming and in awe but it's not needed, just go." John Chas-Wright

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Saturday, June 12, 2010

All-Night puja planned for Buddhafield Festival

A stupa from the 2008 Festival
News is just in from Buddhafield of an All-Night Puja planned for their upcoming Buddhafield Festival next month, to include ritual, chanting and meditation, all hosted by veteran puja-leader Dhiramati. All are welcome - so long as you’ve got your festival ticket - for what promises to be a magical, mythical adventure!

He writes to say -

“I’m doing this to raise at least £500 to go to the Buddhafield Frog Mill land appeal. See my fundraising page at www.justgiving.com/dhiramati and come and support me through the night.

“Actually this is just one of 150 fundraising activities Buddhafield is hoping to organise before the end of the year - the plan is to get 150 people to take up the challenge and raise £200 each in creative and exciting ways. We would LOVE to fully own our land at Frog Mill by the end of 2010. Our goal of £35,000 raised in this way is really achievable - but we need your help.

“Are you looking for an excuse to do something you’ve never done before? Then get involved and be one of the 150! Other fundraisers already planned include a half-marathon; sponsored knitting; a 60-mile walk from Broadhembury to Frog Mill - see them all (or make your own) at www.justgiving.com/buddhfield ”

Tickets for the Festival are available on-line at www.buddhafield.com - book soon or risk disappointment…

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Wednesday, June 09, 2010

Buddhafield Festival seeks FREAKS FOOLS POETS STAND UP MAGICIANS IMPROVISERS ACTORS STORYTELLERS and more...

Over at Buddhafield, in the West of England, they’re putting the final touches to this year’s Buddhafield Festival - their 15th in an unbroken row! And there’s a call out for performers willing to come for free for 5 days. Lizzie Mchale, organiser of the LIZZIE's LIVE LOUNGE and CABARET space in the Festival, says -

Hiya
I wonder if you would put this about on the Order Members secret ethernet communication system - and any other buddhist network you might be on?

BUddHaFiELD FeSTiVaL 2010
the cutest cuddliest safest most supportive lovely place to try something out great crowds lovely people positively family friendly yet daring and controversial in a peaceful kind of way... sort of festival!

WED 14 - SUN 18 JULY 2010

And I’m looking for 
FREAKS FOOLS POETS STAND UP MAGICIANS IMPROVISERS ACTORS STORYTELLERS
and
GENERAL CABARET MELEE

Candidates will probably have buddhist leanings! and I would like to make sure that those who do - get to hear about the opportunity!
Thank you
Lizzie

You’d be performing 3 X 20 minutes(ish) sets plus some guerrilla cabaret around site(and THE 5th BUDDHAFIELD SLAM!)

FREE ENTRY for performers
MEAL TICKETS
some travel expenses
and LOTS AND LOTS OF LOVE.

ONLY A FEW SPACES AVAILABLE SO CONTACT ME QUICKLY (email me here - Lizzie Mchale)
(and don’t call me Quickly at work!)

I love you all!!!
Lizzie Mc

The theme of the Festival this year is A Force for Good in the World - as ever, there’ll be a vast array of teachings, talks, workshops, music, kids activities, ceremonies and much much more on offer - we’ll try and bring you news of the line-up as it reaches us.

 At nearly 3,000 people it’s Triratna’s largest event outside India and consistently attracts rave reviews -whatever the weather!

More photos from last year are on-line on the Triratna Photos site.

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Saturday, May 29, 2010

FWBO/Triratna International retreat day 1 - rain and music...

The first evening of the FWBO/Triratna International retreat saw a beautiful sunset and a wonderful stillness in the air, with the full moon rising clear in the sky - a great beginning for the 430 retreatants who’d assembled from all over Europe and beyond. A dedication ceremony in the giant shrine marquee was followed by mantra chanting and many many hellos to friends old and new around the fire and in the tea tents.

Something changed overnight, sadly, and the next morning the campers awoke to find persistent rain and grey skies. Typical weather for a British Bank Holiday weekend! This was the first of three full days for the retreat - being Buddha Day, Dharma Day, and Sangha Day.

Spirits were undaunted, however, and Jnanavaca’s talk on ‘An Essential Matter - the Demon of Materialism’ was well received. We’ll be bringing you the talk itself as soon as we’ve been able to upload it - for now, here’s some video clips from around the site...



catch it direct on YouTube at www.youtube.com/watch?v=JC0F1kcR53k if the above embedded player is not showing.

And as we go to press the good news is, the rain has stopped and the sky is clearing...

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Friday, May 28, 2010

2nd FWBO/Triratna International Retreat underway, 400+ on site

The FWBO/Triratna International Retreat started today, with over 400 people now on site - from the UK, India, US, Austria, France (lots from France!), Germany (even more from Germany!), Denmark, Holland, Mexico, and elsewhere.

We’ve put together a little video showing the arrivals, some ‘hellos’, and a few of the shrines and rupas around the site.

Check it here -



Or watch it direct on YouTube if the embedded player isn’t showing - the link is www.youtube.com/watch?v=-DOg_1YuUMc

The main programme begins tomorrow, with talks each morning which we hope to bring you as soon as local upload speeds allow! The three days of the retreat are themed Buddha, Dharma, and Sangha, with Monday night - Sangha Day - seeing a collective ceremony to celebrate the change of name of the Movement from 'FWBO' to Triratna Buddhist Community. Watch this space for news...

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Thursday, May 27, 2010

Video clips from the International Retreat setup, dedicating the shrine dome and work circle

Friday sees the start of the second FWBO/Triratna International Retreat, with over 400 people from all over Europe and beyond coming together to explore the Buddha’s Enlightenment and the theme of ‘Turning Arrows into Flowers’. The Buddhafield and Taraloka teams have been immersed in setting up the event since last week, with a rich array of domes, marquees, bell tents and even a sauna springing up to decorate the field adjoining Taraloka - using a crew that already includes men and women from the UK, Denmark, Austria, India, Germany, France and beyond...

We’ve put together a short video clip from the setup showing Satyadarshin’s dedication of the new shrine dome (beautifully decorated with Celtic-Nepalese hangings provided by Dhiramati) and Shantikara’s introduction to the morning work circle.



Find it on YouTube at www.youtube.com/watch?v=1rl9Ipx5vMA if you don't see the embedded player above.

Once the retreat gets going we plan to document the event as it goes along, with video and audio recordings of the major talks, photographs of the people, and commentary from the Triratna News team. Watch this space for our latest offerings - and for now, enjoy the video...

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Monday, May 24, 2010

Setup starts for International Retreat, over 400 expected

Yesterday saw the start of a five-day set-up retreat at Taraloka for the second FWBO International Retreat - a joint venture between the Triratna Chairs Assembly, Buddhafield and Taraloka.

Over 400 people have booked for the event, which starts on Friday. There are a few remaining spaces, please see the special retreat website at www.internationalretreat.fwbo.org if you’re interested.

The generous setup period allows the team - already over 20 strong - to treat it as a retreat, with meditations before breakfast, lunch and supper in Taraloka’s beautiful outdoor ‘Tara Cabin’ shrineroom and free time in the evenings.

And (as this photo from our roving photographer proves) there’s even time to take it easy in-between jobs - a welcome break given the scorching heat.

The biannual International Retreat is the largest retreat event in Triratna’s calendar, bringing together practitioners from across the UK, Europe and beyond. It’s designed to be suitable both for someone on his or her first retreat or for those who’ve already been on many retreats. Either way, it’s a great opportunity to experience the magic of practising together in large numbers and to experience the wider FWBO/Triratna Sangha.

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Wednesday, April 21, 2010

International Retreat news: collective Triratna name change ceremony

The FWBO’s largest retreat, the bi-annual International Retreat, is coming up soon - next month, May 28 - June 1st to be precise. Following the recent announcement of our change of name to the Triratna Buddhist Community, Jnanarakshita writes with some important additions to the retreat programme. Bookings are coming in more and more rapidly, so we’re asking people to book fairly soon if they want to come.  Details are on the retreat website.

He says -
“As you know, the WBO has now changed its name to the Triratna Buddhist Order. Following on from this, on Buddha Day 2010 the Movement around the world will be changing its name to the Triratna Buddhist Community (and local versions thereof).

“There will be an opportunity for those on the International Retreat at Taraloka to join in the celebrations of our precious Sangha and take part in a large-scale puja led by Padmavajra to ritually mark this significant change.

“The main part of the International Retreat programme will still be dedicated to exploring the theme of Buddha Day. In many and various ways we’ll be uncovering the spiritual implications of the incident when Shakyamuni overcame Mara’s army, turning their arrows into flowers.

“We’ll also be looking how to transform some modern-day demons with the help of three key-note talks:

• Vajradarshini on 'Everything Matters - Turning Consumerism on its Head'
• Jnanavaca on 'An Essential Matter - The Demon of Materialism’
• Saddhanandi on ‘Individualism - Hearing the Demon's Comforting Whisper’

We greatly appreciate all your help so far with publicity and have had another noticeable increase in the rate of bookings over the last month. Please reassure people that there are still some places on the International Retreat, especially for those who wish to camp and who are able to bring their own tents and bedding.

Book soon!
“At this stage, there are only a few places left for indoor accommodation. Priority is going to those with medical and/or mobility difficulties, to those travelling from overseas, and to early bookings.

“We’re aware that a number of centres have followed up our suggestion to make a space on the centre's notice board for people to arrange transport to and from the event. This may be stating the obvious, and no doubt you’ve already done this, but please could you remind people that writing their name on the lift-share sheet at the Buddhist centre isn’t sufficient to secure a place on the retreat!

“It would be a shame if people missed out through not sending us a deposit either by post or by booking online. It looks quite possible that the retreat will book up completely. Event licensing terms mean we can only cater for a maximum of 500 people.

“This retreat promises to be a momentous occasion. If you would like to be present, please send your deposit in soon to avoid disappointment. You can book on-line (in 5 languages!) at www.internationalretreat.fwbo.org

with many thanks
Jnanarakshita
Development Team Assistant

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