Emerald Earth Sanctuary





Inspiring Cultural Realignment

through community building and education that celebrates reciprocal relationships with people and all our relations in the natural world.

Big News

Emerald Earth Sanctuary is excited to announce our next evolutionary phase.  After 35 amazing years of doing great things as a predominantly white community, we are entering into a long-term collaboration with two amazing Black-led organizations:  Black to the Land and Holistic Resistance (with their related organizations:  Grief to Action and Unrested Labor).  This collaboration seeks to bring rural intentional community and nature connection opportunities to a population that has been systematically denied access to land and resources throughout American history.


Holistic Resistance and Black to the Land inspire us with their scope and clarity of vision, as well as programming that incorporates spirit, song, joy, grief, education and meditation into nature connection and permaculture.  We have so much to learn from these social justice leaders and are honored to be able to provide them with a land base and technical support.  We encourage you to check out their websites, linked above, and to contribute in whatever way you can to our upcoming fundraising campaign and work projects.


What does this mean for Emerald Earth and your relationship to this land and community? We hope that you will stay interested and involved with Emerald Earth in this new incarnation.  This organization and this land will be black-controlled and the programming black-led, but continue to be open to people of all colors, genders, and sexual orientation.  Tom, Abeja, and Garnet enthusiastically continue to live at Emerald Earth in order to create continuity of care of the land and systems, and to help welcome the new caretakers into the larger Anderson Valley community.



A little about us up until this moment

Emerald Earth is an intentional community in the hills above Anderson Valley. With 6 -8 full time residents, we care for the land, grow a good portion of our own food, maintain and develop earthen dwellings, and sustain a community designed to benefit rather than deplete the planet. You are welcome to join us for a variety of workshops, internship positions, farm stays, work parties, scheduled tours, or even overnight visits. Our purpose is to honor the sacredness of the Earth and the interconnectedness of all things, to celebrate the rhythms and cycles of the natural world, and to live in a creative and engaged community.

Scroll down for a little more about who we are and the history of Emerald Earth Sanctuary…

Matsu the dog and our giving goats

Matsu the dog and our giving goats

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Kiddo 1

having fun!

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Sandy (Currently moving off site)

Working for the good of all!

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Kiddo 2

with friends!

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Luisa (Currently moving off site)

At home in the garden

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Abeja

Tending the bees

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Eden

Gardening Yogini

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Tom

The handiest man around!

Emerald Earth is a rural intentional community in Mendocino County. Our key values include peace, sustainability, social activism, education, and consensus decision making. We believe it is our responsibility as human beings to rediscover ways of interacting with the land in ways that enhance its ecological health, and we choose a lifestyle based as much as possible on biological power rather than chemical, more on social solutions than mechanical ones.

The community was founded in 1989, when a group of friends from Berkeley found and purchased the land near Boonville in the Anderson Valley, about three hours drive north of San Francisco. This group called itself the Emerald Earth Laughing and Drumming Society and came together regularly for singing, drumming, and ritual, both in the city and on the land. They spent a couple of years cleaning up the site and fixing the main cabin and other infrastructure, then five people moved onto the land in 1994. During this time, the non-profit corporation Emerald Earth Sanctuary was formed and the land was deeded to it. After a while most of this original community moved away, although several are still members of the Land Council. One member of the original group remained as the sole permanent resident for several years.

Starting in 1999, a new group moved onto the land. With their experience in sustainable agriculture and natural building, they began building cabins, planting trees, growing food, expanding infrastructure, and organizing work parties. We are dedicated to sharing knowledge, and each year Emerald Earth hosts hands-on workshops and work parties focusing on skills such as natural building, permaculture, prescribed burns, Ancestral skills etc.

Over the years, the number of residents has fluctuated between six and fourteen.  For the last few years, the membership has been relatively stable and small, although some new members have joined and some have moved on.  We currently have seven permanent residents (including two children). Our ages range from 10 to 66, with a concentration in our late early 40’s.

We have several kinds of regular meetings to take care of communication, decision making, and group process. At our weekly business meeting we discuss scheduling, work priorities, and other day-to-day decisions. We also have a periodic sharing meetings to address interpersonal issues. Major decisions on policies, long term planning, membership, and budget are made by the Land Council, which meets four weekends a year. The Land Council is made up of resident members and some former residents now living off site.

Life at Emerald Earth requires a large amount of physical work including building, gardening, maintenance, chopping firewood, preparing food, caring for livestock, cleaning, and so on. We eat most dinners together, taking turns cooking and cleaning. Our diets center around traditionally prepared and processed organic whole foods, which are produced on site or sourced locally.  Sometimes we have organized community work days, but much of the time members are working on various projects under their own initiative.  Often people disperse to their private residences in the evenings. During the dry months (May-October) there are lots of visitors, events, and projects; winters tend to be much quieter. We like to celebrate Solstices, Equinoxes, and other special occasions with non-denominational rituals.

Most residents have work part-time jobs in the small town of Boonville (a 20-minute drive) or beyond.  Some examples include: cooking, building, massage, teaching Yoga,consulting, teaching in the local school system, practicing Chinese medicine, or teaching natural building workshops. It’s important to us to maintain a strong social and political connection with the larger Anderson Valley community. Our main on site income source have been hands on workshops, drying seaweed (harvested at the coast), and raising livestock. We also have received grants for Prescribed Burns and Forestry which helps us to maintain a healthy forest that is fire resilient.

Links to other Intentional Community resources:

Fellowship for Intentional Community
Communities Magazine
Occidental Arts & Ecology Center

Emerald Earth
PO Box 764
Boonville, CA 95415
707-972-3096