Karin's Rainbow Gathering 2024 news and ideas for creating a peaceful and healing gathering of the tribes somewhere in California, Oklahoma or Washington State, July 1 - 7, 2024. As with all things related to Rainbow Gatherings, this is not an official source of information and represents my thoughts and opinions only. Other people will have different ideas.
Critical gathering information
Getting into the gathering without getting a mandatory court appearance ticket
Friday, March 29, 2024
Creating Community
Here are some musings on how I and others I know have created community. You may have different ideas.
Find your tribe. The annual gathering over July 4 is a "gathering of the tribes." There are many tribes with different vibes. While all the tribes are my family and I love them all, I like some of the tribes more than others.
Finding a tribe can be random: you bump into someone on the trail, a conversation starts, and you feel connected in the heart.
Finding a tribe can be intentional: wander around the gathering, stop in at different camps and talk to people, feel the vibe in that camp and fall in love or at least connect with people who grock you.
Finding a tribe can come out of shared workshops, late night drum circles, Shanti Sena movies, finding a lost kid, or being introduced to someone by a friend of a friend.
Finding a tribe can be learning to love the people in your physical space no matter how much they drive you crazy.
Once you've found your tribe at the gathering, you have a found a community within a community. These communities connect with each other sometimes directly, sometimes indirectly, forming a web of communities that provide nourishment, love, entertainment, company, and meaning in our lives.
Communities are what holds the gathering together. Some communities are small, maybe three to five people who camp together, others are large and sprawling like Kid Village. No matter what kind of a community you participate in, your contributions are critical to creating and maintaining that community. Sharing your music, your labor, your art, your poetry -- all these things create and enhance community and make the magic that is the gathering.
When coming home for the first time, all of this may be overwhelming and it may take many gatherings before you find that community that truly fits you. No worries. People move from one camp to another quite often. One day or one gathering you can camp at Iris, then the next day or the next gathering you can move to Taco Mama. The choice is yours.
No matter which community, tribe, or camp is the one that calls your heart, try to accept help from your tribe and try to give help to your tribe. Together we can weave a strong family.
Friday, March 22, 2024
Spring Fever
Now is the perfect time to start getting ready for the gathering. So here's a random list of steps you can take now to create a positive gathering for yourself and others this summer.
Make sure your car is 100% legal. All brake lights, turn signals, seat belts, registration, insurance and nothing hanging from your rear view mirror. The cops seem to like to pull people over and write mandatory court appearance tickets for the littlest thing. Who needs the hassle of a mandatory court appearance ticket just because you forgot to fix that broken tail light? (did you read this?)
Make sure your camping equipment is in good shape. Check your tent for leaks. I hope we'll see rain this summer and camping is much more fun in a dry sleeping bag.
Check out thrift stores, garage sales and swap meets for things you can share with others at the gathering: tents, 60 quart cooking pots, sleeping bags, cast iron grills, very large metal mixing bowls, hiking boots, digging shovels, pick axes, rain gear, etc. Once you get to the gathering, ask around and someone will be sure to need what ever you brought to share.
Get in shape. Yup, at the gathering you'll be walking for hours every day so now is the perfect time to get in shape. Try walking an hour a day for starters if you're not in the habit already and plan to be up to four hours a day by mid-June. You will have more fun at the gathering if you can experience it.
Plan a workshop or camp focused on your special talent. Some ideas are singing, drawing, ocarina making, drum making, meditation, yoga, belly dance, Tai Chi, sewing, caring for dogs or cats (probably not a great idea to mix dog and cat camps), massage, or beading. Start getting your supplies together and your friends lined up to get there early and find a great place for your camp. Then arrive at least week or so before July 1st (two weeks scores a better site for your camp) and start creating the camp. You are the rainbow magic and the gathering happens because individuals like you share your unique talents with other gatherers. Don't forget to announce your workshop at breakfast/dinner circle, post a notice on the workshop board at INFO, and maybe make some signs on the main trail informing people of when and where the workshop takes place.
Plan a fundraiser for Everybody's Medical, water crew, scouting, or the Magic Hat that you support. Remember just because everything at the gathering is free, doesn't mean we get everything free.
Get involved with scouting. If you like to read maps and walk the land, email me and I'll hook you up.
Build a rickshaw or other fat tire wheeled device powered by human or animal energy to help transport mobility impaired gatherers and food supplies to kitchens -- you will be one of the most popular people at the gathering.
Start a list of all media outlets in the consensus states (see top of blog) and get together with other folks and start contacting people with positive information on the gathering.
Get your first aid certification so you can help keep our family healthy.
Rehearse your best rainbow story for Hipstories on the night of July 5, than share your hard won wisdom with your family.
Get a job and earn money (or set aside some money from your existing earnings) to donate to the magic hat on the land to feed your family or to buy a boat load of fruits and veggies and bring with you to share with the hardworking kitchens that are feeding you.
Learn how to play guitar and share your music with your family. Learn some of the Rainbow songs now and teach them to people on the land. Or become a wandering minstrel (trail musician) and share music in tense situations.
The most important lesson I've learned through my gathering experiences, is that the more I give to the gathering, the more the gathering gives to me and the more I grow and evolve as one of the amazing creatures on this miraculous planet. I can't wait to see your amazingness on display when I hug you on the land.
Monday, March 11, 2024
The First-Timer’s Practical Guide to the Rainbow Gathering (Guest Post)
The First-Timer’s Practical Guide to the Rainbow Gathering
When is the Rainbow Gathering?
The rest of the day is usually spent celebrating together in the meadow with drumming, large quantities of watermelon and other fruits, good conversations and music. Dinner Circle is not served in Main Meadow on the 4th of July. Instead, dinner is served that night only out of the individual kitchens.
How much does it cost?
How do I get there?
Usually, as you arrive, someone volunteering to greet people in the parking lot will walk up to your car, say hello, and welcome you home, and then tell you about the parking situation, ways to drop off stuff near the trailhead if necessary, and the best place to currently park. Parking usually involves driving off the dirt road into another big grassy meadow. There are sometimes bumps to drive over and areas that you might not normally drive your car, but you will find a place to park.
Do I camp near my car?
What does the village at the annual Rainbow Gathering look like?
Basically, the whole village surrounds (landscape permitting) the Main Meadow. This is a meadow waaaay out in the middle of a National Forest. It’s usually a pretty big meadow surrounded by forest and there are forest paths going out in most directions that wind in and out of the surrounding hills where people camp.
Somewhere, usually on Main Trail very near the Main Meadow you will find THE INFO BOOTH, with a crew of well-informed helpful people who can answer your questions, and where you will find a Calendar of Events, a Ride Board, a Message Board, and a colorful painted map of the Village to help you find your way around.
On the trails and paths surrounding the Main Meadow, and all along the Main Trail, you will find a wide variety of Camps and Kitchens. Camps are groups of people camping together, who have given themselves a name and identity. There are also camps that are just people finding a nice place to put their tent. Kitchens are actual kitchens in the woods that are also public gathering spaces to hang out and meet people, listen to music, and enjoy some tea or coffee.
Other things you will always find at a Rainbow Gathering is a medical camp called CALM, and a camp called KID VILLAGE which is a kitchen and a camp: a comfortable area for families to camp together that usually has a playground of some sort, kid-friendly meals, and other families to meet and talk to. There is also usually a theater stage called GRANOLA FUNK and a SPIRIT HOUSE, which is a place to remember loved ones who have died.
What exactly are Rainbow Kitchens?
Just outside of the kitchen area itself, there is almost always a second camp fire. This is called the kitchen’s Bliss Fire. Most kitchens have a Bliss Fire that they create as the social area of the kitchen. Bliss Fires are places to hang out and talk, make music, eat food, drink tea, and relax. Bliss Fires are created to keep the cooking area less populated and more workable.
There are different kinds of kitchens, some small and some large. Some kitchens just make popcorn. Other kitchens make huge quantities of food to serve to hundreds and hundreds of people at Dinner Circle each evening in the Main Meadow. Some kitchens make just tea or just soup or just coffee. There is also a kitchen that serves as the bakery which makes mostly just bread rolls but also occasional pizzas, cakes and cookies. Often kitchens are united by a theme: either people from a particular area of the country, or people who have a similar interest.
Now that you have your dishes, you need to get some food. Most (but not all) kitchens serve breakfast and/or lunch out of the kitchen and after yelling “FREE FOOD IN THE WOODS!!!” they will usually serve food from the kitchen counter. Servers stand on the cooking side of the front counter, with folks lining up in an orderly fashion on the outside of the cooking area. Before lining up, folks wash their hands at a handwash that is usually ALSO found on the kitchen counter. Never serve yourself at Rainbow. Always allow someone else to serve you to keep things clean. When you get to the front of the line, bring your dish to the outside edge of the serving pot, below its rim, and allow the server to lift a serving of food up over the rim and down onto your plate. Set your plate so that if any food falls, it falls on the ground and not back into the pot. The server should not touch their spoon to your dish, and will shake the spoon until the food falls onto your dish. This keeps people healthy. It is a practice at Rainbow called “Don’t touch your Thing to the Thing” and is used in serving food, filling water bottles, coffee cups, etc.
At Dinner time, everybody who wants to come, comes to the Main Meadow to eat dinner together in a large circle. Many of the largest kitchens bring food in large cookpots into the center of the circle and when there is a critical mass of food and diners, camp announcements are made, and the people stand up in a circle, hold hands, become quiet and then “ooooohmmmm” together. Then everyone sits in the circle and gets out their plates, and prepares to eat. At this time, children and nursing mothers are called to the center of the circle to get served before everyone else. Then the servers take the vats of food out of the center to different areas of the circle and move from person to person and serve the people all in the same direction around the circle. No one stands in line, and everyone is served multiple dishes.
Many people also bring private food to keep in their tents, to eat as snacks or when they miss a meal. These include things like granola, trail mix, apples, dried fruit, seeds, protein bars, carrots, etc.
Water is usually collected from natural springs around the Gathering site that bubble up out of the ground. These springs must be kept pristine so they are usually taped off and nobody camps near them. The spring water is captured and fed into long black pipe tubes that you may see crossing a walking path or going over a meadow. These water pipes are usually gravity fed to either a spigot where it will be marked with signs telling kitchens to filter or boil it for at least ten minutes, OR the pipes will lead to an actual filter and deliver filtered water, OR the pipes will lead to very large water collection containers with signs telling you if it is potable (drink-able) or not.
Basically, you just live in the village, in community with other peaceful participants. First timers usually take some time to walk around and figure out the dynamic of living at the Gathering. A visit to the INFO BOOTH is a good way to find something going on. You can check the Calendar for workshops you might want to attend or join Yoga practice or see a show at the Granola Funk stage. You can just walk around the village and spend a little time at each kitchen’s Bliss Fire and check out the vibe at each place. If you have some skill or knowledge to pass on, you can teach it to others by just going to the workshop board and writing it in, along with a good place for people to meet you. In the evenings there is often good music around the fires and some kitchens cook Zuzus for folks, which are any sort of sweet treat made over the fire.
There are quite a few packing lists on the internet of good things to bring to the Rainbow Gathering, but at the core you need to have something to sleep in… blankets or sleeping bag, and for most people a tent. Some folks sleep in the open by fires or in hammocks but a tent is the common method. You will probably want to have a pack or something to hike this stuff in for about a mile or two. Some folks use bags and carry stuff in their arms. Then, when all set up, most people have a daypack of some sort (school-type backpack/messenger bag type thing) in which they carry a plate and/or bowl, a utensil, a water bottle and usually a cup to drink tea or coffee or soup. You put all this stuff in your bag and carry it with you because you don’t know where the day will take you, or when food will happen, and you may go from morning to night without ever going back to your tent. Many people bring a HAT because they are outside all day every day. Sunscreen is a good idea. Bring the stuff you would usually bring camping, minus the food and the food prep stuff. Bring musical instruments. Bring money to put in the Magic Hat if you can – you are receiving two or three meals every day. Bring some snack foods to keep in your tent in case you miss a meal here and there. Bring a trash bag to keep your trash in and hike that out at the end. Bring all good things.