Spring 2019
Oh my friends, I have a story for you. It’s a good story,
because it has a good ending, and being near the end of it makes me Very Happy.
Many of you know that I and my partner have, for many years, been using and
developing our patch of land as Pagan sacred space. Starting with an 8-acre lot
that Sue has been on since 1975, and expanding in 2013 to include 8 additional
acres to our north. Along with a small patch on the other side we now work with
17ish acres. The tale begins following the expansion.
The new acreage was, when we purchased it, a disused
satellite growing-field for the nursery-stock, shrubs, etc that is a common
local agriculture. On our early inspections it was serene, with shoulder-high
grass, overgrown shrubs and a variety of lovely flowering trees. It was a
lovely acquisition, but with it we also acquired new neighbors.
Just north of the northern boundary of this new property a
family keeps their several acres of small agriculture, horses, etc. We seem to
have frightened them. It was certainly the case that for as long as they had
owned the property that patch had been quiet, even deserted… flowers, deer and
bunnies, nice place for the dogs to run – I get that. Then comes us. The grass
is mowed, the roads regraveled, regular tractor action, and people – our people.
(for details on the progress, click the Tredara tab on the blog front-page, and
recall that articles are reverse-time-line order)
Having acquired the acres in 2013, we immediately began building a new, larger
worship space, and by the following spring we were holding our Stone Creed
Grove seasonal rites in it during the summer. That fall we built a new 30 x 50’
pavilion-roof and attached shower-house. With that in place we hosted the ADF
Wellspring Gathering at Tredara in May of 2016. This modest, 120-ish-person
event had previously been held at the Brushwood folklore center, but this moved
it into our full management.
Even prior to that we had our first visit from our local
zoning inspector, who mentioned some neighbor concern and wondered just how commercial an operation we were
running. He explained that some complaints about our activity (and some
presumptuous youtube vid claims by me...) had brought him out, but was satisfied that we were making incidental use of
our personal back-yard to host our church events.
The fact is that Tredara is not and has never been a ‘campground’.
We do not charge by the night to camp, nor advertise ourselves in that way. We
are, and have always been a sacred space for Pagan worship and spiritual
practice. From the days in the 80s when our coven met in the woods, through the
evolution of our public Druidic work the place is the private project of Lia
Fal and I. We build in service to the Gods and the folk, and with honor to the land.
While we have been blessed with donations we seldom seek them, and we’re just
not in it for the money, as they say. Nevertheless, the place has been a buzz
of construction, campers, hippies, pagan drumming and chanting and the
installation of idols in the five-ish years we’ve owned it. I can understand a
degree of culture-shock for the closest neighbors.
So this past fall the zoning inspector returned to our door, and had a look
around. I’ll keep the details simple – our ‘agricultural’ zoning forgives a
lot, but we’re not really doing agriculture. The decision was that our uses
were ‘permitted’ under ‘conditional uses’ in the local ordinance. That began a
process of determining the ‘conditions’ under which we would be permitted to
continue.
Of course I was prepared to stand on the first amendment. I was allowing my
church to use my farm for services and our annual reunion-campout. However in
the USA if anything overrides the bill-of-rights it’s local land-use
sovereignty. I hoped to avoid the employment of attorneys in the matter, and in
the end I was able to do so.
I have also had my faith in the culture of my corner of NE Ohio affirmed by the
lack of passionate Christian opposition to our efforts. The offended neighbors
held back from any religious reference, and we debated noise and imposition. Early
on there *were* people at the podium with concerns about “what kind of church”
was being permitted, but the members of the Board of Zoning Appels plainly said
that such a topic was not at issue in the discussion. At no time past the very
first speakers were our ways mocked or belittled – mainly they were
accommodated. In the end there was no outcry from either Evangelical or
Catholic local churches, may they be blessed by the spirits of America.
The offended neighbors leaned on issues of noise and property-security. It seems
they had had a distressing random visit or two, which they wanted to attribute to our guests. We agree that good fences make good neighbors.
My kin, this all-winter process has had my brain just Parked! Our goal here has
been to make a sacred space for the sake of our folk, and now we faced an
external authority’s mandate on whether we would have to undertake a serious fight
to keep our dream alive. Discussion happened only on the record at live meetings,
so we were simply suspended for weeks at a time. By the final meeting quite a
groove had been worn in my patience.
However the process was, I must judge, fair and right. The bureaucrats were
helpful, the board members cooperative and neutral-to-neighborly. They all
toured the place for an eyes-on judgement, and listened in fact to our needs
and plans. It seems plain that they had never seen anything quite like us,
before.
In the end we were granted our conditional use permit as a ‘place of public
assembly’! The only bad news is a mandate to install a big, damned-expensive
fence along the boundary with the offended neighbors. We’ll do it, fulfill a
few other simple requirements, and be free to flow as a working Pagan sacred
forest and worship garden here in NE Ohio.
Magic? Well, some… we’re not done with every little thing, but I’ll say that I
began asking Certain Others for their aid last fall, and various measures have
been taken over the months. I give thanks, of course, to all those who have
aided us.
All in all this is the public birth of the Tredara Hearth Farm & Shrine. Now
we can actually put up a sign (must do, in fact…) and publicly be what we have
been. At this time we’re not soliciting new events, or looking to expand our event
program. Rather we’ll focus on our facilities for worship, and making our
occasional camping guests even more comfortable. Our sacred work will continue,
teaching and incidental ceremony will probably increase, and we can begin
really fitting ourselves into this thing we’ve built, and growing into the
corners.
Thank you for sharing your journey and all you do for our community. can't wait to get back. Ravenoir
ReplyDeleteIt sounds wonderful. Great work on sticking it out through the challenges, and congratulations on what you have built!!
ReplyDeleteExactly where in NE Ohio ? East of Cleveland I'm presuming. Id love to pay ya'll a call when I get back out there for Sirius Rising some year !
ReplyDeleteWe're in N Madison (so-called) 44057; about 10 minutes north of I90 east of Cleveland.
ReplyDeleteFind me on FB...
What incredibly fantastical news!!! One of these days I’ll get back there, mark my words. In the meantime, congratulations to you, Sue and the community��-Merry D
ReplyDeleteThe ?? Is the dancing lady icon. Just imagine her with red hair;)
ReplyDeleteKeep doing the work because your gifts allow it to happen.
ReplyDeleteIt' good to hear that at least some of the time the system works the way it should. Its a shame that the onus of building the fence falls on you, but in the long run it's a small price to pay, and the blessing is that the fence works both directions. I hope to see you in a few weeks for Wellspring, if I'm not able to make it this year I will next year. Bright Blessings!
ReplyDelete