Ura Gora means Hurray for the forest, a celebration of renewal and growth- an ever growing forest of trees and a forest of people who may inhabit together this beautiful place in South Bulgaria.
Our Foundation is based in ‘Rodovo Selishte’, the first eco-village in Bulgaria, where we currently have eight families living together on their own plots of land.
The ‘Ura Gora’ founders are two young families who have settled in the fields of a deforested and degraded territory in Strandja Sakar, with a mission to restore the ecological and social balance of the region through the following activities:
1. Demonstrate positive action through our own life example of harmonious and sustainable coexistence with local nature
2. Organization of regenerative design and implementation for healing the local environment – planting of hardy pioneer plant species to restore biodiversity in the region
3. Attracting supporters – volunteers, local government representatives, sponsors, decision makers, the media, to help process
4. Creating conditions for more young people to participate in the process of recovery of the area and training in alternative methods for Sustainable Development (Permaculture model)
5. Education for local community to understand the problems and begin to design and implement sustainable solutions to the problems in the region, including innovative models for small scale enterprise.
Overview of need in the region:
There is an ever increasing need for reforestation in Bulgaria, especially in the large areas cleared and degraded for mass agriculture. There are clear links between forestation and regulation and stability of an ecosystem.
This reforestation is not only the responsibility of special departments; we as global citizens and local active communities must be part of this- for the benefit of the environment as a whole and in the creation of forests as productive ecosystems that support our needs for food, shelter, medicine, fuel, enterprise and clean peaceful place for living and learning. In turn we must see ourselves as caretakers of these systems, which we oversee and maintain in their development to maturity and stability.
These new forests are vital to avoid the typical mono-cultures that are a poor replacement for ancient forests, instead being designed around diverse poly-cultural plantings that make use of collected rainwater, build fertility and stability in the soil and regulate air and water in the micro climate.
Background to project
The foundation has the use of 25 dekars, owned by its founders which is open to visitors and volunteers, on which we aim to create a demonstration site for a large forest garden system.
We have already begun to reforest this area and improve the soil, testing methods of design, species, systems of planting and irrigation suitable to the harsh conditions of this land. We have invested our own time and resources to this end and received much help from volunteers as part of weekend actions and longer term placements we have organised.
We are surrounded by approximately 300 dekars owned by other families with desire to develop an Eco-village in this area. Outside of this we are surrounded by vast mono-culturally worked lands where there is danger from desertification, erosion, contaminated groundwater. This area sits between three villages of decreasing population due to low economic and social opportunity.
One of our ongoing projects is the creation of forest gardens in which we record and publicise the results for purposes of education and development of further stages of the overall system. The intended goals are:
+ Forest based productive system giving multiple high value yields for low long term energy input in terms of labour and non-renewable resources.
+ Windbreak established using fast growing, hardy pioneer species to protect areas for living, volunteer and guest camp and also productive gardens and orchards.
+ Using earthworks of various scales (Swales- channels on contour; Boomerangs- small ditches and mound on contour) to passively collect, hold and infiltrate rainwater from the landscape to establish plants faster, protect from erosion and run-off and reduce energy input.
+ Collective planting and recording of system with volunteers, including children, as opportunity for education, including observation of functions of natural eco-system, how to adapt elements to damaged area and gauge appropriateness. Also ongoing observation of plant development in system, in response to weather conditions, human maintenance and positive or damaging interactions with wild plants, animals and insects.
We are also involved with permaculture education,natural bee-keeping, natural building, appropriate technology development: ram pump, rocket mass heater, off-grid power.
We work with local and international volunteers.