Thursday, June 17, 2010


Hello all,

Well tomorrow will offically be the end of my second week at Kalikalos. It's been an amazing experience and am already planning my trip next year. This week the staff and I were invited to a "Being Dance" workshop held by our sister camp Anilio. We've also gotten our creative energy at full force with our new art table up. I've learned a lot about community this week, building open relationships, and being confident in myself. It will be sad to leave tomorrow but I will leave knowing that I gained more than a suntan out of my Greek holiday. Look forward to seeing everyone next year!

Amy Mo

Jackson, WY

Monday, June 14, 2010

Hello all,

The week is unfolding here at Kalikalos. I arrived at the center over a week ago and have been finding my niche. The sun is shining and the beaches are sparkling clear. We set to work last week to welcome the sacral massage workshop lead by Helen Rohlicek and Susan De Muynck of England. The staff and I got to be test bodies and quite enjoyed it!

Also in participation was Dr. Ian Tenant, a reporter from Resurgence magazine. Look for Ian's article about the Centres in the next few months.


This week we're hosting the Non Violent Communication (NVC) work shop already underway. The days are very busy here and very satisfying. We've all been working hard and enjoying long afternoons next to the Aegean Sea. Even after just one week the staff has built a very deep connection and a successful community. I look forward to the coming weeks!

-Amy Mo
Jackson Hole, WY

Sunday, June 13, 2010

New Roundhouse is Up!



Those of you who have been following this blog will know that last September our 7m diameter round group room was destroyed by a thunderstorm that dumped gallons of water on the canvas roof sections, which collapsed in the night breaking nearly all the members of the reciprocal framed structure.

As this is the main group room at the Kissos campus, this was a disastrous loss. The structure was built by Nigel Hilton and volunteers during the 2002 season at Anilio and had been moved in 2008 to the Kissos campus.

So the first priority for the May workcamp at Kissos was to rebuild a new Roundhouse. Ivor Fletcher from Oxfordshire came out for the entire May workcamp and designed the new structure. Working closely with Mark Taplin, Ivor built himself a workbench from old pallets and basically rebuilt the structure from scratch, making some necessary changes to pitch so that water would not accumulate in the canvas roof sections and ensure that the new Roundhouse would be immune to the problem that destroyed the original structure.

The photos above show the last stages of the work, with most of the camp helping to align the beams, and finally Ivor putting the cap in place.



The final photo shows Gina Lawrie's NVC group at work in the new roundhouse. Kudos to Ivor, Mark and all the team for their commitment to finishing the new roundhouse in record time and well within budget as well. Next May: we hope to bring Ivor back to construct a roundhouse for the Anilio campus where the postholes from 2002 are ready and waiting!

Jock Millenson, 2010 Kissos Coordinator

Sunday, May 30, 2010

Workcamp Novice




It was a bit of a leap in the dark, but I had seen the Kalikalos brochure last year, and had thought then that a week or two working in the sunshine with congenial people would be just the thing for me. Due to pressure of work, I had to cancel my trip last year, and so when invited to come this year I jumped at the opportunity.

I had heard that the Pelion (or Pilio) was beautiful, but nothing prepared me for the scenery as Jock drove me up from Volos and over the mountains to the east of the peninsular where the two "campuses" that make up Kalikalos are situated, in two mountain villages, a couple of miles apart.

I went first to Anilio - a wonderfully rural setting on the edge of a village that straggles along the road, houses clinging to the hillsides, which are clothed in forests of chestnut. I arrived, as I so often seem to do when I go on holiday, on a cold wet evening when I needed all the clothes I had bought from England. The villages are quite high (500 metres or so) and so have a milder climate, with rain at times. Over the next few days it warmed up and we set to work to finish the jobs outstanding before the first group of workshop attendees appeared.

This meant building a shade out of timber and bamboo matting outside one of the buildings to give some more shade for when the heat of summer comes. We also worked to bring the group room into shape - which involved putting back in place the roof, walls and floor that had been stored away safely over the winter. The result was a beautiful space big enough for dancing and movement, and with one side open to the forest.

I've now moved to the other part of Kalikalos at the village of Kissos. This is on the edge of the village centre, and one is much more aware of the community around the centre. The same daily rhythms of breakfast, meeting, work, lunch, beach, work, dinner apply as at Anilio, with lots of delicious vegetarian wholefood cooking. I am sure I have lost weight on the trip, and feel a whole lot better than I did a week ago. This is a great place - I hope to be coming back again some day.

Rob

Saturday, May 15, 2010

May 2010 2 week work camp




The first group arrived in the two centres last week to get the places organized for the workshops that start in June.

The places are closed over winter so all the gardens have to be replanted and rooms opened and cleaned out. The tents and yurt need to be put and the kitchen reorganized and cleaned.The big project going on here is rebuilding the roundhouse where most workshops will be held. Lots of cleaning and unpacking are needed.

Then there is the daily rhythms of cooking, buying food and cleaning up that must be done alongside getting the place ready.

All this is done by a group of people from various parts of the world who for the most part do not know each other. There is a mix of ages from 19 to sixty.

An important part of the daily rhythms is to have a morning sharing to keep us connected to each other and to our own inner emotions. Its a time for planning the day ahead and dealing with practicalities as well as clearing tensions.

We also gather for meals holding hands for a moment to be present to the group and the food and gratitude for being here.

Of course there are the rhythms of socializing. Most days include an afternoon at the beach and socializing over meals. I especially like it when the 2 houses get together for a meal which leads to guitar playing and singing. We also had an evening meal out at one of the lovely seaside retaurants.

This place is set in some spectacular mountain scenery that overlooks the ocean. The bus ride in was long and very winding but stunning in its beauty. The tiny village is quaint with its fountains and cobblestoned road and square. Roses are blooming everywhere amidst the greenery. The weather has been sunny and just hot enough to be comfortable.

I wait for the next week to unfold.

Sharyn and daughter Kylee from New Zealand

Sunday, October 11, 2009

Erholungsparadies


Als ich 3 Tage vor meiner Ankunft einen Lastminuteflug nach Thessaloniki buchte, hatte
ich keine Ahnung, was ich eigentlich 3 Wochen lang in Griechenland machen soll.. ich
hatte blos diese gewisse Sehnsucht der stressigen Grosstadt, der herbstlichen Kaelte
und den unfreundlichen Berlinern zu entfliehen..

Ich suchte nach wwoofing farms und aus irgendeinem Grund war Jock der einzige, der mir antwortete. Das war mein Glueck und das erste mal, dass ich sagen kann " gut, dass ich nie rechtzeitig plane.."

Als ich in Thessaloniki ankam, war ich mir nicht mehr so sicher, ob es das wirklich war, was ich gesucht hatte. Doch auf dem Weg von Volos nach Kissos verfluechtigten sich meine Zweifel Stueck fuer Stueck. Die kleinen Doerfer sind wunderschoen- kein
Vergleich mit den Staedten- und von den Bergen aus schaut man auf tuerkises Wasser.
Der Busfahrer und all die Dorfbewohner, die er auf seinem Weg aufsammelte, waren
freundlich und offen.


Als ich schliesslich den Weg durch Kissos nach Kalikalos fand, wusste ich, dass es das
war, was ich gesucht hatte- mehr sogar!
Zwischen Rosen und Haengematten im Apfelbaum schaut man aufs Meer und kann den
wunderschoenen Sonnenuntergang beobachten. Es ist eine Mischung aus beruhigender
Stille und lebhafter Freude, die diese magische Atmosphaere ausmacht.

Die Gegensaetze von Gitarrengesang am Lagerfeuer und Trinkspielen in der Taverne, Meditation am Morgen und Capoeira am Abend, gemeinsamen Lachens und gemeinsamer Problembearbeitung, Schlafen in der Haengematte, Entspannen am Strand und Gartenarbeit sind es, die diesen Ort zu einem besonderen machen.

Vor allem die wunderschoene Natur und die intensive gegenseitige Wahrnehmung, die
jeden einzelnen von uns zu einem festen Teil der Gruppe machte, haben mich begeistert.

Traumhafter Strand



Anna Steger, Berlin