| On October 1, 1997, Dancing Rabbit closed on its new land and become
the owner of 280 acres of beautiful Missouri rolling hills. After 4 years
of working towards our goal of creating an ecologically sustainable town
we finally own some land to do it on. |

Click maps for full size image |
Our land includes five ponds, a couple dozen acres of nice pasture, a creek
that runs much of the year, a sometimes-flooded wetland in the bottomland,
and about 60 acres of woods scattered around the steepest parts of the
property. Our savannah-like combination of trees and fields means we've
got a mini-biome for just about every ecological situation. Much
of our land is open fields that are enrolled in the Conservation Reserve
Program, a federal contract that pays us yearly to perform erosion-control
measures, plant trees, and encourage wildlife conservation. These lands
haven't been farmed for over a decade, so the soil is regaining the health
it lost during years of over-farming. If we decide to take some fields
out of CRP to grow food for sale, the land can be certified organic immediately.
In terms of structures, we own a sturdy large metal shed (suitable for
storage, tractor maintenance, biodiesel production, a basketball court,
or all of the above), four grain bins of various sizes, an open-sided pole
barn good for housing draft horses or protecting an outdoor kitchen, and
an assortment of old wooden sheds.
We'll be building our new town on the southeast corner of the property,
served by a gravel road and where there are several existing outbuildings.
Exactly where town center should lie is still the subject of much debate.
Articles from our Newsletter about the surrounding area:
A new town, a new plan
- 10/97 -- Getting
our town centered -- Restoring
forest and prairie -- A
Dancing Rabbit Pattern Language
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A
Story of the Land
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