It’s not what you might think!
Although it’s true that our fur babies love the freebie organic snacks they can score at Earth Day celebrations around town (April 22 this year) and of course we all appreciate those biodegradable poop bags, WWOOF is short for World Wide Opportunities on Organic Farms. It’s a program started in the 1970s by a secretary in London who missed her childhood vacations in the countryside. She worked with a local university to create a trial program where fresh-air-starved urban dwellers could volunteer at a small local farm for a few hours a day in exchange for a country weekend with tasty home-cooked meals. The idea took off, and half a century later it’s a worldwide movement to promote sustainable family-run farms. Today there are more than 12,000 hosts in 130 countries, from a pineapple farm in Hawaii to a dog and horse rescue farm in Texas to a lavender field in Provence. Way beyond helping to grow organic vegetables, the experiences are as broad as the imagination, from beekeeping and mushroom foraging to tending water buffalo and building earthbag homes. Luxury is not part of the experience: accommodations can range from rustic cabins and mobile homes to yurts and tents. Some farms are completely off the grid; others offer a room in the host’s home. WWOOFers can spend a week or two, or even months, coming away with new skills, extraordinary cultural insights, and maybe lifelong friendships. Hundreds of hosts welcome children, and many also accept pets. The best part? No money changes hands.
I confess that my one experience on a WWOOF farm spanned about four hours in the French countryside and mostly involved my very appreciative palate. I still can taste the banquet of homemade bread, cheeses, savory stews, garden vegetables, pastries, and wine from a local vineyard shared by the young owners, family members, and guest workers at a 15-foot-long trestle table in their picturesque barn-turned-bunkhouse. I occasionally surf the WWOOF websites and imagine trying it for real. Although tending water buffalo isn’t on my wish list, my fantasies run to harvesting bouquets of peonies, caring for baby goats, and foraging for mushrooms.
Here are some super cool family-friendly ideas I plucked from WWOOF.net and WWOOFusa.org.
Moloka’i
Hunt and Gather, Hawaiian Style
WWOOFers help grow and supply a fruit stand; hunt, fish, dive, and gather some of the world’s tastiest foods as they soak in the wisdom of the elders on one of Hawaii’s last tribally controlled islands.
Great Smoky Mountains
Build a Bat House, Do Mosaics
Pick your own project: rock bordering flower beds, bat house or birdhouse building, organic flower gardening, organizing workshop, sewing, mosaics. More comfy than typical, the cabins have kitchens, a library and movies. Stay a week or a few months. Woman-owned, pets accepted.
Norway
Gather Hay, Make Cheese, Pick Berries, Do Chores
A stunning mountainside family farm with goats, horses, chickens, and bees. WWOOFers share in all farm and family chores, including household and gardens. Pets accepted.
Ohio
Work on 19th Century Heritage/Survival Skills
This biodynamic farm is a WWOOFer family favorite, set in a re-created 19th century village with a 1960s vibe. It’s also a school that teaches skills like survival/homesteading, soap, candle, cheese and butter making; and foraging, plus a Waldorf-inspired farm school for homeschool kids. Hosts need help with gardening, carpentry, cow milking, and everyday chores. Accommodations are basic cabins and a teepee. Woman-operated. Pets accepted.
Tennessee
Blaze a Trail, Make Art, Tend the Magic Garden
This artist/philosopher/writer host seeks WWOOFers with practical skills, especially gardening. The payback, besides accommodation and food, includes a wildlife refuge and sculpture park, Shinrin-yoku (forest bathing), a birding tower, sauna, woodworking shop, sacred beekeeping, plus a pottery wheel, painting and sewing materials, and all kinds of artmaking.
Alaska
Pick Peonies, Sleep in a Cute Log Cabin, Have Fresh Eggs Daily
For an easy introduction to WWOOFing, I love this family favorite. Besides my aforementioned attraction to peonies, I’d get to feed the chickens and rabbits, mulch the garden, practice pickling, and help build things. There’s a pool and fire pit, and the hosts generously lend their farm vehicle for exploring Alaska’s backcountry.