As the Drala Jong fund grows, in recent times there have been a number of requests from donors and volunteers to get a more tangible sense of what Drala Jong will be, what facilities will be there, what work will need to be done to get it up and running, where it will be located and so on.
Well, it’s confession time. . . mea culpa, mea culpa, mea maxima culpa. . . I’ve been reticent to blog about these things, because the answer to all these questions is very much ‘it depends’. It depends, for example, on how much money we finally do raise.if we raise £450,000 the project will still go ahead, on a slightly different scale. Alternatively, we could easily spend £1,000,000 is someone were so moved to donate that much money. Everything’s relative (although as someone once said ‘If everything is relative, why don’t they send me Birthday cards?’). Those intimate with the project have not wanted to flag up a specific building because until the fund is closer to the £500,000 mark, it would mean, like Jim Bowen, we’d be saying ‘Let’s look at what you could have won’ If supporters set their hearts on a particular set of sash windows, they may ultimately be saddened if the property of their dreams isn’t the one we end up acquiring.
What we’ve decided to do to respond to these requests is to meet people half way, and start to make the vision that is Drala Jong just that little bit more tangible by covering some of the key qualities that Drala Jong will possess.
There a various ways of enumerating the considerations in deciding what Drala Jong will look like, and where it will be, but they can all be captured under the headings of cost, location, facilities, condition, and flexibility.
For this installment, since finding property is all about location, location, location (so Kirsty tells us, and who are we to argue?), we thought we’d start with that element. In terms of project goals, there is a balance in choosing a location remote enough to be suitably private, in an environment supportive of practices that are performed out of doors, yet close enough to major transport links and local towns and cities. Sangha members and the public who have attended public retreats with us in Britain over the last 20 years will know that many of our retreats have been in various parts of Wales. In recent times, they’ve been in and around Llandeilo and Llandovery. Drala Jong will be a rural retreat centre – that is a given – and past retreatants will be used to having to travel some distance to get to our events. Since our lineage holders had to travel to India and Nepal to receive teachings, our efforts are relatively easy by comparison. The good news is, whether travelling within Great Britain or from abroad, the intention is to be more accessible than Llandeilo – our main location of the last 15 years.
The fund raising brochure stated it would be ‘close to an hour from Cardiff’ – the home of the lineage holders, and one of the sangha hubs. With this in mind the location is going to be within the area encompassed by South East Wales and the Southern end of the Welsh Marches. Specifically, in the region of Brecon, Abergavenny, Usk, Monmouth, Ross or Hereford.
All these locations are within the orbit of the main areas where many British-based sangha live – Cardiff and Bristol – the latter being particularly important given the presence of our Bristol Aro Ling centre. These locations are also within reasonable distance of 3 regional airports at Cardiff (Wales), Bristol (South West England) and Birmingham (Midlands) for European travelers, with many being on rail or coach routes from Heathrow airport for transatlantic visitors.
For those used to travelling from South Wales or Bristol, compared Llandeilo these locations are closer in time and distance for all likely travelers. Many are very considerably closer. To give a sense of this, the travel times in minutes by road follow below (c/o the Automobile Association website):
mins. | Cardiff | Bristol | Birmingham | Heathrow |
Llandeilo | 75 | 114 | 173 | 204 |
Brecon | 63 | 96 | 130 | 185 |
Abergavenny | 53 | 64 | 105 | 155 |
Usk | 39 | 46 | 98 | 135 |
Chepstow | 42 | 27 | 99 | 116 |
Hereford | 80 | 87 | 80 | 165 |
Ross | 67 | 72 | 72 | 144 |
Monmouth | 51 | 58 | 88 | 147 |
All these locations have direct or indirect links to the M4, M5 and M50 motorways:
For public transport users, and international travelers, most of these locations also have National Rail or National Express Coach connections which link to the regional airports and the national hubs around London. Current travel times by public transport, and the number of changes needed – if any – for Sunday travel are as follows. NB. we chose to show Sunday travel times because retreats commonly end on a Sunday, and also because if you can get public transport on a Sunday in Britain it will definitely be possible to travel on a weekday (commonly far more quickly, with less changes – ‘C’ for change):
Rail? | Cardiff | Bristol | Birmingham | Heathrow |
Llandeilo | C/2hrs16m | C/3hrs | 2C/4hrs14m | 2C/5hrs20m |
Abergavenny | 45mins | C/1hr | C/2hrs | 2C/3hrs15m |
Chepstow | 44mins | C/1hr | C/90mins | 2C/4hrs |
Hereford | 1hr6m | C/1hr28m | 1hr40m | C/3hrs39m |
Coach? | Cardiff | Bristol | Birmingham | Heathrow |
Chepstow | 1hr | 30mins | C14hrs30m | 2hrs5m |
Hereford | 2C/7hrs20m | C/4hrs35m | 2hrs16m | C/4hrs50m |
Ross | 1hr30m | C/4hr15m | 1hr25m | C/4hr20m |
Monmouth | 1hr5m | C/4hr15m | 1hr45m | X |
In essence, all the rail or coach connected areas are within 2 hours travel of Cardiff, Bristol and Birmingham by public transport, even on the worst travel day of the week (Sunday). All the areas with good public transport links are much more easily accessed than Llandeilo, by 30 to 60 minutes.
So, that’s location. In the next installment of this Blog, we’ll look at cost, and specifically what £500,000 would buy today in each of these locations.
Is that a Lotus Elan parked in from to Drala Jong?
I certainly favour that! Khandros in black leather catsuits come to mind…
(I hope that everyone in the UK sangha, at least, is familiar with Emma Peel's preferred transport…)
Bother! "a Lotus in front of Drala Jong" is what I thought I typed.
@ meaningness – well, you obviously write everything with such elan, it was inevitable there'd be a slip at some point.
Are there any calculations of the annual upkeep costs, bills, expenses of pensioned white skirts etc?
@ Anon – there is a standard accounting framework drawn up (P&L, cash flow etc.), with estimates against almost all the items you mention. The estimates are based on known costs from properties costing £500,000 in similar parts of Wales, plus our experience from the Aro Ling centre in Bristol. Once a final property is settled upon, then the actual current figures for that property can be transposed into the plan, to give a final view. That would be part of due diligence (final vetting) prior to making any kind of commitment to purchase. Within the core volunteer group are some financially minded sangha members who will have oversight of that. More on this in a future blog.
Pensioned white skirts? Well, that would be a different fund raising exercise altogether, but actually I'm aware of some nascent ideas coming from those ordained practitioners approaching pensionable age around them pooling their resources to fund a 'home for nackered ngakpas' as they put it – in the vicinity of Drala Jong. The two projects could easily intertwine to a greater or lesser degree – but they'd be separate exercises (in the first instance).
Thanks for this explanation of the "vision."
What the dead line to get as close as we can to the goal?
@ Sian – good question. The management committee of the U.K. Charity which is running the appeal discussed this topic when we met in late June. The reply will be the subject of a forthcoming post titled 'Unlimited Focus' which has been inspired by the thoughts of Lamas Nor'dzin & 'ö-Dzin, and Naljorma Thrinlé.
Watch this space!
Have you thought about buying a suitable plot of land and then building this vision in phases?
Overall costs could be reduced significantly, people could have a tangible sense of contribution in bringing this vision into form. I dont know the funds you have available but it may allow for this idea to start sooner, then just grow.
Dear Anon! Sorry for the delay in responding. What you describe is exactly the way the project is structured. The goal is to build something expandable – with the potential for future growth and expansion, as well as to build something flexible – that can accommodate more people on a one off basis, for example through camping. There will some some posts on this in the New Year, but at the moment we're doing some more fact finding (and fund raising!).