Personnes & Lieux
Artists & TeachersEvent OrganizersVenues & StudiosKnowledge BaseGlossaryInspirationFonctionnalités de la plateforme
Tarification dynamique intelligenteCatégories de billetsPlaces assignéesRécupération des paniers abandonnésRécupération des visiteursDons & Prix variablesSystème d'affiliationScanner de billetsCodes promoQuestions personnaliséesPartage de billetsVentes additionnelles & OptionsAnalyses & RapportsSéquences d'emailsListe d'attente / Notifier / RappelerVoir toutes les fonctionnalitésÀ propos
Programs at
Retreat Center · Forres, Moray
Spiritual community and ecovillage rooted in conscious co-creation with nature.
Findhorn Foundation stands as one of the most influential spiritual communities in the modern world, a living laboratory where ecology, spirit, and creative arts have intertwined since 1962. What began when three unemployed hotel managers, Peter Caddy, Eileen Caddy, and Dorothy Maclean, arrived with three young children at a windswept caravan park on Scotland's Moray coast has evolved into an ecovillage that has welcomed thousands from over 40 countries and inspired hundreds of intentional communities worldwide.
The founding story borders on mythic. Eileen received inner guidance from what she called 'the still small voice within,' which Peter translated into action with military precision honed from his RAF catering career. Dorothy communicated with what the founders believed were nature spirits, devas, receiving practical guidance on how to work with plants. In the barren sandy soil of Findhorn Bay, they grew legendary 40-pound cabbages that attracted horticultural experts and BBC attention by 1965. Word spread through the nascent New Age networks, and spiritual seekers began arriving.
In 1970, American spiritual teacher David Spangler joined as co-director of education, helping transform the community from a charismatic leader-centered group into a more structured educational foundation, formally registered as a Scottish charity in 1972. The community grew to 300 members by the 1980s, acquiring Cluny Hill Hotel in 1975 and the caravan park itself in 1983, now known as The Park Ecovillage. By 2005, Findhorn Ecovillage housed around 450 residents with the lowest recorded ecological footprint of any community in the industrialized world, half the UK average.
Physically, Findhorn occupies two main sites: The Park at Findhorn Bay and Cluny Hill in nearby Forres. The Park features 125 ecological buildings including iconic whisky barrel houses, the handbuilt pentagonal Universal Hall seating 350, the Phoenix Shop and Café, and the Nature Sanctuary built from local stone and whisky barrel staves. Wind turbines generate electricity fed back to the national grid. The Living Machine treats wastewater. Straw bale houses, breathing walls, and passive solar design demonstrate cutting-edge sustainable architecture. The community has received UN-Habitat Best Practice designation twice (1998, 2018) and is a founder member of the Global Ecovillage Network.
What makes Findhorn distinctive is its marriage of inner and outer work. The three core principles established by the founders remain central: inner listening (accessing divine guidance within), co-creation with nature's intelligence, and Love in Action (work as spiritual practice). Daily life blends meditation, attunement, shared meals, 'focalising' (facilitative leadership), and Sacred Dance with ecological innovation and communal decision-making through consensus.
The community weathered significant trials in recent years. In April 2021, two iconic buildings, the hexagonal community centre and main sanctuary, were destroyed by arson fires set by a disgruntled employee facing redundancy. The COVID-19 pandemic, Brexit, and energy costs compounded financial strain. In September 2023, after 50 years of educational operations, the Findhorn Foundation Trust ceased offering courses, laying off 50 staff and selling properties including Cluny Hill.
Yet Findhorn's spirit proved resilient. Community members formed the Ecovillage Findhorn Community Benefit Society in 2023, raising over £415,000 to purchase land and buildings, securing community ownership. The new Light of Findhorn Sanctuary opened Easter 2025, rebuilt larger than before. A new Findhorn Foundation SCIO (Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organisation) was established with fresh trustees, resuming Experience Weeks, the signature seven-day immersion program, in 2025-2026. The ecovillage continues to thrive with 40+ community businesses, the Phoenix Shop and Café, the Universal Hall hosting international performers, and daily meditations.
The three founders are gone, Peter died in a car crash in 1994, Eileen peacefully at home in 2006 (having received an OBE in 2004), and Dorothy in 2020 at age 100, but their legacy lives on in a community that has touched tens of thousands of lives and continues to prototype regenerative living at the intersection of consciousness, ecology, and community.
What's Happening
0 programs scheduled at Findhorn Foundation
No upcoming programs at the moment.