WWOOF experiences?

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Jellybean
Posts: 9
Joined: Sun Apr 08, 2012 3:01 am

Post by Jellybean »

I am very interested in developing WWOOF options as part of my low cost travel/vacation options. I have seen it mentioned here a few times. I would be curious to hear about anyone's experience with WWOOF.
Is it easy to arrange? Is there enough free time to see local sights?
Any insight from fellow ERE'ers would be most appreciated!


S
Posts: 288
Joined: Thu Jul 22, 2010 8:02 pm

Post by S »

I posted about the wwoofing I did last fall: viewtopic.php?t=1549 The experience will vary a lot based on who you stay with.


riparian
Posts: 650
Joined: Tue Oct 25, 2011 4:00 am

Post by riparian »

I've had great experiences, but I've mostly come upon them through friends of friends or a travelling network I'm part of.
I've generally only stayed for two weeks and worked anywhere from 4-16 hours a day building a straw house, doing maple syrup, and harvesting plants. It's good for networking, and people are usually friendly about showing you around if they have time.


Jellybean
Posts: 9
Joined: Sun Apr 08, 2012 3:01 am

Post by Jellybean »

Thank you both! Great to hear about your experiences.


RelicO
Posts: 77
Joined: Mon Dec 26, 2011 3:17 am

Post by RelicO »

I'm interested in this as a way to basically pass time without spending money, perhaps while compounding an investment portfolio. Can one WWOOF for literally a year in one area, or is that impossible due to farming seasonality?


rachelFLF
Posts: 18
Joined: Mon Nov 29, 2010 1:05 am

Post by rachelFLF »

@ JoeShmoe
I think it just depends on whether the location has a climate for year round farming or not. If not, it would have to be a farm that specifically produces winter veggies, or dairy or something.
The thing about WWOOFing is that the experience and the opportunities really vary, as S said. You might mesh really well with a farmer, and after a while you might both agree you'll stay more long term. No way to know that in advance.
If it doesn't work out long term at one place, then you'll be needing to bounce from farm to farm. There's a risk of having periods where you have no farm to live on, so you'd need to be prepared to spend money to cover those in-between times.
I guess you'd want to pick an area with a lot of WWOOF participating farms. Hawaii fits the bill for that, and farming is year round there. You still have to be prepared for anything though - some farms there take WWOOFers, but only offer an area where you can pitch your tent, rather than a room with a bed. Of course that's the type of thing you'd work out in advance, but my point is that just because an area has a lot of farms advertising on WWOOF doesn't mean those are all comfortable places to live.


RelicO
Posts: 77
Joined: Mon Dec 26, 2011 3:17 am

Post by RelicO »

Hawaii....Duly noted!!!:)
Sounds super cool. I would probably think about doing that in 5-6 years after accruing a nice dividend growth portfolio. Just let the dividends compound painlessly while enjoying the sun and working with my hands...
That actually sounds really good.


mikeBOS
Posts: 569
Joined: Sat Nov 13, 2010 6:46 am
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Post by mikeBOS »

I think this idea generally of finding something to do for a few years while investments accumulate is a powerful idea. Finding something that doesn't necessarily add to the nest egg, but allows you to not have to take any withdrawals either, allowing compounding interest to do its thing.
I just threw together a page for the wiki on it with a quick list I just brainstormed. There must be tons more options I haven't thought of.


beav80
Posts: 61
Joined: Mon Jul 18, 2011 8:36 pm

Post by beav80 »

I WWOOFED in Italy. Had a great time at a guy named Marino's. We mostly helped him build an addition to his house. We (another WWOOFer and I) ate and drank well, we were near a national park so in the afternoon I'd go for a walk in the hills. Really memorable. If I had one word of advice, it would be to be very near to something you know you'll enjoy (park/beach/city) and be willing to push back if your boarder is not accommodating the usual 6 hours/day of work rules.


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