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Findhorn and Foundation
Two entities founded in 1962: the Esalen Institute in Big Sur, California and the Findhorn Foundation — an intentional community which continues to operate the Findhorn Ecovillage near Findhorn, Moray, Scotland — played an instrumental role during the early growth period of the New Age movement.
Some of the better known modern experiments include the Findhorn Foundation in Scotland, Dancing Rabbit Ecovillage, Twin Oaks and Los Horcones ( inspired by B. F. Skinner's Walden Two ) and The Farm in the US, ZEGG in Germany, Camphill Communities ( all over, but originating in Europe ), and Auroville in India.
Her subsequent instructions from the " voice " directed her to take on Sheena Govan has her spiritual teacher, and became a spiritual teacher and new age author, best known as one of the founders of the Findhorn Foundation community.
Crombie claimed to have met Pan many times at various locations in Scotland, including Edinburgh, on the island of Iona and at the Findhorn Foundation.
Thinking predicated on the development of world conscience is common to members of the Global Ecovillage Network such as the Findhorn Foundation, international conservation organisations like Fauna and Flora International, as well as performers of world music such as Alan Stivell.
Circle Dance is sometimes also known as Sacred Circle Dance from the original importance it had for the Findhorn Foundation community in Scotland following visits there from 1976 onwards by Professor Bernhard Wosien a German dancer.
The Findhorn Foundation is a Scottish charitable trust registered in 1972, formed by the spiritual community at the Findhorn Ecovillage, one of the largest intentional communities in Britain.
The Foundation runs various educational programmes for the Findhorn community ; it also houses about 40 community businesses such as the Findhorn Press and an alternative medicine centre.
Prior to the Findhorn Foundation in 1972 there was a Findhorn Trust as more people joined Eileen Caddy, Peter Caddy and Dorothy Maclean, who had arrived at the Caravan Park at Findhorn Bay on 17 November 1962.
The Findhorn Foundation and the surrounding community have no formal doctrine or creed.
David Spangler became co-director of Education almost immediately after he arrived in 1970 which resulted in the gradual transformation into a centre of residential spiritual education with a permanent staff of over 100 and the setting up of the Findhorn Foundation in 1972.
There are now a wide variety of courses and conferences on offer and this remains the Findhorn Foundation ’ s core activity.
The Findhorn Foundation College was established in 2001.
The Findhorn Foundation Ecovillage Project has received Best Practice designation from the United Nations Centre for Human Settlements ( Habitat ).
Since the 1980s numerous organisations have started up in the vicinity of Findhorn which have an affiliation of some kind with the Findhorn Foundation.

Findhorn and surrounding
There have been a number of critics of and controversies surrounding the work of the Findhorn Foundation since 1962.

Findhorn and Ecovillage
This barrel house was the first dwelling constructed at the Findhorn Ecovillage.
An Green building | eco-house at Findhorn Ecovillage with a turf roof and solar panel s
The Global Ecovillage Network, formed by a group of about 25 people, from various countries, who had attended the Findhorn conference, crystallized the event by linking hundreds of small projects from around the world, who had with similar goals but had formerly operated without knowledge of each other.
Findhorn Ecovillage has been awarded UN Habitat Best Practice designation from the United Nations Centre for Human Settlements ( HABITAT ), and regularly holds seminars of ' CIFAL Findhorn ', a United Nations Institute for Training and Research ( UNITAR ), affiliated training centre for Northern Europe.
A Barrel House — the first new dwelling to be created at the Findhorn Ecovillage
The wind turbines at Findhorn, which make the Ecovillage a net exporter of electricity.
Findhorn Ecovillage is based at The Park, in Moray, Scotland near the village of Findhorn.
Within the Findhorn Ecovillage at The Park, sustainable values are expressed in the built environment with ' ecological ' houses, innovative use of building materials such as local stone and straw bales, and applied technology in the Living Machine sewage treatment facility and electricity-generating wind turbines.
The Findhorn Ecovillage is intended to be a tangible demonstration of the links between the spiritual, social, ecological and economic aspects of life.
As of 2005, Findhorn Ecovillage has around 450 resident members, and its residents have the lowest recorded ecological footprint of any community in the industrialised or the developed world, and also half of the UK average.
This is a joint initiative between The Moray Council, the Global Ecovillage Network, the Findhorn Foundation and UNITAR.
In 1979 Peter Caddy left the Findhorn Ecovillage community he had founded.

Findhorn and community
All aim to practice the founding principles of the community and together make up the New Findhorn Association ( NFA ).
In 1999 a community association, the New Findhorn Association or NFA, was formed to provide a structure for all the people and organisations in the community.
The phrase " the Findhorn community " thus has at least 3 meanings: the Findhorn Foundation ; the NFA ; and the people of the village of Findhorn.
* New Findhorn Association – website for the community association
Category: Findhorn community
Peter Caddy ( March 20, 1917 — February 18, 1994 ) was a British caterer, hotelier, and founder of the Findhorn Foundation community.

Findhorn and at
The ecovillage movement began to coalesce at the annual autumn conference of Findhorn, in Scotland, in 1995.
Findhorn attracts cultural and artistic events, such as Mike Scott ( musician ) | Mike Scott and The Waterboys, shown here playing a concert at Universal Hall in 2004.
Through connections such as these and the distribution of Eileen Caddy's writings to a New Age mailing list in the form of a booklet titled God Spoke to Me, people came to live at the Caravan Park, eventually forming the ' Findhorn Trust ' and giving rise to the nascent shape of the ' Findhorn Community '.

Findhorn and Park
It includes people from within a 50-mile radius of The Park, at Findhorn.
Originally formed as part of the Findhorn Foundation they now operate as an independent charity, though their offices are still based within the Findhorn Park, and they continue to maintain strong links with the community.

Findhorn and village
He and Eileen settled in a caravan near the village of Findhorn ; in early 1963 an annexe was built so that Dorothy Maclean could live close to the Caddy family.
Though by 1957, things changed irrevocably, and the other members had regrouped at Glasgow by themselves, as Eileen and Caddy, now married, found jobs at Cluny Hill Hotel near Forres ( four miles from Findhorn village ), Maclean joined them as the hotel's secretary and soon all parted ways with Sheena.
Findhorn () is a village in Moray, Scotland.
The Findhorn Foundation, an educational charity and the associated ecovillage are located to the south of the village.
* Findhorn, a village in northern Scotland
* Findhorn Bay, a bay off the Moray Firth, near the village
* Findhorn Foundation, a new age community located near the village

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