PEACE JOURNEY Venue Search Taking Us Down More than Seven-Paths!
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Saturday was a day-trip for us to look at a farm music event venue for our upcoming songwriting/concert camp, on a very cold and blustery early fall Illinois day.
Stonehouse Farm is only 1 hour and a half from downtown Chicago, but working 2-GPS systems simultaneously gave us two different directions to go in. We decided to chose the road less traveled, adding another 45 glorious country road minutes to our drive.
Cornfields were abundant. After a few years working at sponsorKIDS to promote healthy food in our local schools, I learned about all the corn that is being grown for sucrose in Illinois, eliminating many other crops that could be grown for food. All I can tell you is growing up in Ohio with it's abundant cornfields, I have never seen as many cornfields as on the back roads trip to Stonehouse Farm near Sandwich, Illinois.
We passed a small sign announcing Stonehouse Farm and immediately pulled in. We first noticed that the farm's wood fences on the property needed repair and a coat of creosote or paint. Following the driveway to the front porch of a mid-size barn-like structure, we walked inside, where we found a chef preparing food for that nights sweat lodge. We sat down to enjoy coffee and meet the primary owner. The building was rustic and cozy.
I had read about Yurts, the temporary tent structures around the farm that sleep 2 to 8 people each, depending on the size. These are the only accommodations currently available outside acres of campsites on the premises. Rachel, the assistant in charge of events (oh and by the way, also an anthropologist and gourmet French Chef), drove us around the property in a bright yellow one-seater golf cart as we viewed the campgrounds, garden and compost area, overnight parking for 500 cars, newly constructed showers, the pond, a sweat lodge, a large area where a stage can be erected, a grassy field large enough to accommodate up to 2,500 music concert goers on the lawn and barns, where yoga and other performances could be held.
The actual Stonehouse Farm four-bedroom house is to be rehabbed, but it doesn't sound like that will be completed in time for our event in 2015
Our songwriting camp needs to house about 30 to 40 people plus our production crew, and Stonehouse Farm would be a rustic choice with a lot of hidden costs.
But I keep thinking that the best creativity happens when we are close to nature. And I also remember Woodstock, although this would be a much smaller and less celebrity driven undertaking. So, I am getting out the spreadsheet and seeing how viable this venue might be for 2015.
I do know this: the spirit of the land is amazing and it just felt good to meet people so grounded in what matters for the use of the land. On the way back, we drove past Aurora University. It's beautiful and I understand they have a fine music school there that could be an asset to our project.
So the search for the perfect home for Peace Journey Seven Paths songwriting camp and concert continues. Please leave a message if you know another location like Stonehouse Farm, a spiritual retreat, or a venue that collectively cares about community and nature, in and around the Midwest and within 3 to 5 hours from Chicago that might work for us in 2015.
I have no choice but to run down parallel paths looking for just the right home. And it's fun to explore all the options as this important decision will lead us to find what we hope will become a permanent and annual home for us to live, create and breath for peace.
We are charting our next Peace Journey Adventure Trip 2016 to Peru where we will explore with high school students the amazing rain forest and indigenous people as we work on a deeper connection with the earth. Stay tuned.
Thank you.
Jeannette Barcelos Kravitz
jkravitz@peacejourney.com
www.peacejourney.com
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