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Cathy Marjoram's avatar

A field has been bought in Wrington by a group of people from the village. They have a caravan for drinks and shelter, a polytunnel and vegetable beds. They all share the work and the produce. They are not farmers and the only selection az to who can join is that they must want to be there and do some work when they can. They are not farmers. I have come up against farmers with regards to buying a field and the feeling was it was their right to have first dibs on any fields for sale and the idea that ‘normal people ‘ might want to own and tend a field was inconceivable and wrong. The community built in the previous field I mentioned has been invaluable both building and sustaining a small community, and seeing people through lockdown, as it is big enough to work at a safe distance whilst still seeing another human being. We need more community fields.

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Jacky Smith's avatar

The Ecological Land Coop is working to expand access to farming land, in a very creative way: https://ecologicalland.coop/.

And I recently joined the National Trust purely because of their excellent recent work on acknowledging colonialism, and told their PR team so. De-normalising racist attitudes is something many of us can get on with.

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