Listing Information

Number of Workers Sought

3

Type of Farm

Hay & Forage, Large Animal (cattle, sheep, goats), Small Animal (pigs, rabbits, poultry), Dairy, Vegetable, Fruit/Orchard, Other

Marketing Strategy

Farm Stand, Farmers' Market, Wholesale, Education

Paid

Yes

What are the dates of your position?

May-October (though flexible)

Are you open to shorter periods of employment or do you prefer that workers stay the full season?

Shorter periods of employment possible, Prefer full season

Housing

Yes

Explain the room and board arrangements or describe options in your area

We provide on-site housing which will be in a camper, hayloft, or on a sleeping platform on the farm and orchard.

Food
Black Robin will provide you with staple foods (If you work 24 hour weeks) from which you will prepare meals for yourself. We do not generally provide snack or junk foods but instead provide the healthy basics such as dried beans, oats, rice, meat -including meat from our farm animals-, cheese, vegetables, bread, milk, yogurt, nuts, vegetables, and fruits. We eat lunch together occasionally. Breakfast is on your own and extremely basic (oats, eggs, bread, fruit). We encourage each volunteer to cook a few lunches a week for the others. Dinner is on your own, with staples and other basic ingredients we provide.

Please share three things you think people should know about living with you.

At the FARM we are CURRENTLY working mostly on construction, a little planting and landscaping. Midsummer we may have the opportunity to build or renovate a residence, which would allow Wwoofers to learn some electrical, plumbing, framing, concrete work, finish carpentry...everything you need to know to start building their own house or tiny house someday. Our construction is not natural building. Recently, for instance, we built a tiny structure on a dump truck, a ceramics studio, a bridge over our pond, a yoga platform and stone patio. Construction, landscaping, planting (in the spring) and weeding (all the time) are our major projects at the moment. We may also work on curriculum development, additional trees, lavender, hops, grapes and other edibles, raising fish, surely weeding, planting cover crops, grains, and gardens, perhaps fine-tuning the root cellar, terracing berms, landscaping pond and wetland, timber-framing and masonry, restoring a stream bank, perhaps building a sauna, mulching and composting. Oh, and we are always always weeding!

1- I expect hard work, 2- I'm a bit of a micromanager when/where necessary, 3- I believe everyone can do every job.

Black Robin is a four acre Farm and Orchard right on the edge of Bozeman, along Sourdough Creek. We’re 8 minutes by bicycle to downtown, 7 minutes to the University, 5 minutes to the Bozeman Public Library, 4 minutes to two parks, 3 minutes to the Farmers Market, and just seconds (very literally, just across the street!) to miles of biking, hiking and cross-country ski trails.

WE ARE CURRENTLY looking for volunteers to join us from mid June to mid September or October. We also may have some volunteers start in May. We will also occasionally consider shorter term help.

We are currently working mostly on outbuilding and cabin construction and on planting and landscaping. We may also be working on installing new permaculture elements, potential tiny house building, curriculum development, additional trees, lavender, hops, grapes and other edibles, possibly raising fish, surely weeding, planting cover crops, grains, and gardens, perhaps fine-tuning the root cellar, terracing berms, installing solar power (when we can afford it), designing a grey water system, landscaping pond and wetland, timber-framing and masonry, restoring a stream bank, perhaps building a sauna, mulching and composting. Oh, and we are always always weeding!

The Farm

Black Robin is located on four acres just on the eastern edge of Bozeman, Montana. It is bordered by Sourdough Creek, and includes a pond, greenhouse, classroom and studios, farmhouse, cabin, campers for volunteers, outdoor eating and hang-out area, a newly-planted orchard, several garden plots, tiny house construction site, grape arbor, hugelkultur berms, and pasture/open space for our livestock. Black Robin is a couple minutes by bike from downtown Bozeman, the public library, Montana State University, the farmers market, a stop for the free bus line, and a few seconds away from miles of biking, hiking, and cross-country skiing trails. Bozeman, in turn, is a few hours away from Yellowstone and Glacier National Parks, dozens of hot springs, many Indian Reservations, and numerous National and State Forests and recreation areas.

Black Robin's Mission

At Black Robin we strive to use the land wisely, grow organic, work toward sustainability and self-sufficiency, eat healthy, experiment with efficient permaculture, agriculture, animal husbandry, and homesteading skills and then demonstrate those skills to kids, families and young adults.

We are

Black Robin is made up of volunteers, interns, local volunteers, and farm partners. We generally have between two and five volunteers at the farm at any given time.

Work

At Black Robin we work three and a half days a week, three seven-hour shifts and one four-hour shift. In addition each of us work five hours per week on chores, farmers markets, or individual farm projects. We work efficiently and intensely with only one break for lunch so that we can finish our work in this very short amount of time. Much of the work at Black Robin is physically demanding (digging, sawing, using a pick-ax), plenty is tedious (weeding, path making, hand digging and cultivation of gardens), and some requires skill-development and careful attention to detail (construction, milking goats, bottle-feeding lambs and goats).

A typical communal work day at Black Robin has us waking up quite early for chores and meal preparation, eating breakfast on our own, then meeting for an overview of the day's plan. We do a warm up stretching, yoga, and motivation session then begin to work. We may weed gardens or pull seed heads from pasture weeds for an hour or more, then begin individual or small group projects such as hauling wood chips for paths, adding compost to gardens, sanding rough cut boards for construction, building a wall, pouring a concrete footing, mucking out livestock quarters, etcetera. In the middle of the work day we eat lunch together. After work (in the afternoon and evening and on our days off) we do our chores and farm projects.

This year we will be experimenting with three six-week sessions and three four-day volunteer vacations dividing up the sessions. We will be encouraging our volunteers to work a full session and then take a vacation (partially funded by Black Robin) to a national park or other area of interest in Montana. We will also be encouraging our volunteers to work the entire three session season and take two mini-vacations with the group.

Our season

Bozeman has approximately 90 frost-free days (from 15 June to 15 September). March through May we are starting seeds, preparing garden beds, organizing for the Bozeman Seed Exchange, helping goats and sheep to have babies, bottle feeding babies, and working on construction projects. In May and June we are planting our gardens, tending trees, getting our irrigation system fixed-up and running, still bottle feeding babies and working on construction and landscaping projects. In July and August we are tending gardens, taking care of animals, weeding, removing seed heads from weeds, planting cover crops and green manure crops, working on construction and landscaping projects. September through November we are harvesting, saving seeds, preserving vegetables for the winter, still weeding and removing seed heads, planting more perennials, preparing gardens for spring, and still working on construction and landscaping projects. October through May we can finally relax and are hoping to begin taking it easy.

What sort of volunteer does well at Black Robin

Black Robin has had many great volunteers. Some have come to us with skills and experience with farming and construction and many have not. We are constantly trying to figure out who does well here and who does not. This is important to us because volunteers who are ill-suited to Black Robin may leave with a bad feeling about farming, about our farm, and about permaculture. Also, when volunteers leave before completing their agreed-upon stint this leaves Black Robin in a bad position and may hurt group morale. So, we want all our volunteers to be enriched and satisfied with their experience at Black Robin.

The following seem to be characteristics of volunteers who are happy with their Black Robin experience: they come to Black Robin prepared to really work (not only, for instance, to see Montana or get a free place to stay for a few months); they enjoy hard work; they know what farm and homesteading work entails; perhaps they have worked on a farm or at a very demanding job before; they are not afraid to get dirty, to sweat, to have their muscles ache after work; they are willing to ask their supervisor for special accommodations in case they are feeling overworked; they are generally positive people; they understand and accept that there might be a better, more efficient, quicker way to do chores and they strive to find that way; they are willing to try anything; they want to learn as much as possible; they realize a certain amount of drudgery and repetition may be required at a farm; they are willing to do monotonous tasks such as hauling wood-chips or weeding for (occasionally) several hours a day; they are flexible enough to accept when conditions are not as they expected them to be; they can deal with working very quickly and efficiently for eight hours, three days a week, and then to do their relaxing after chores and work.

What we don't do

We try to make Black Robin a healthy place and a model for our visiting children and families. We do not allow smoking, alcohol, or drug use on the farm. Any parties end at dusk.  We also want to insure our safety by not having any fires, candles or incense in campers, and to never leave appliances – except the refrigerator – plugged in in our summer kitchen.

Progress so far

Black Robin began in 2013. Since then we have built a greenhouse, chicken coop, livestock quarters, outdoor pavilion for volunteers, grape arbor, and pond, erected grain bins, set-up campers for volunteers, built a classroom and studio building, installed a septic system, renovated a cabin, constructed a farmhouse, planted an orchard, several gardens, raised beds, and herb gardens, planted 1500+ perennial edibles, restored 300 feet of stream bank, built-up several hugelkultur berms, raised many great goats, sheep, chickens, rabbits, and pigs, designed and constructed a masonry heater, eradicated numerous noxious weeds, taught groups of children about permaculture and homesteading, and started the Bozeman Seed Exchange.

Progress Still to come

Black Robin has many projects still in the works. We would like to erect one or more tiny houses, a straw-bale livestock house, improve our pavilion and outdoor eating area, plant more perennial crops such as grapes, lavender, and more fruits and berries, eradicate more weeds, build more paths, erect two or three more grain bins, build another greenhouse, construct a second masonry heater, raise more animals, expand our permaculture and homesteading classes for kids and families, create an atmosphere conducive to hard work on the one hand and artistic endeavors on the other, and perhaps to establish an international component where we can bring our labor and skills to other countries.

What you should bring to Black Robin

Though we have some of these items for you to use, it is best if you bring the following with you to the Farm: work gloves (one pair for every two weeks you will be here), sun hat, clothing appropriate for the season, work boots, a bicycle, medications, sunscreen, bedding, toiletries, a swimsuit for the hot springs, enough clothes so that you only need to do laundry once or twice a month, a water bottle big enough to carry a half day's worth of water, and a thermos or insulated mug if you want coffee or tea with you when you work.

Challenges

There are many challenges to working on a farm in general, farming in Montana, and specifically volunteering at Black Robin. You may have to work in cold, rainy, snowy, and muddy weather; you will have lots of hard work; you will share housing in small campers; there will be limited shower availability; there is no laundry facility; we have neighbors who are sometimes ornery; you will be supervised by a bit of a workaholic micro-manager ;-) ; you will face "best practices" established by previous volunteers so that you will be expected to do each task faster, smarter, safer, more responsibly, and more efficiently than you would expect; you will need to come to Black Robin ready to create a community with other volunteers and to plan activities for your days and evenings off; and there will likely be other challenges as well.

What you will learn

When you stay long enough at Black Robin you will learn some or most of the following: a new meaning of "hard work", construction skills, how to use power tools, how to measure and plan for a construction job, how to pour concrete, weeding and weed management, general labor skills, gardening, orchard care, beekeeping skills, basic homesteading, animal care, cheese making, goat milking, sausage making, animal slaughtering, landscaping basics, pond management, tree planting and care, minor veterinary, and other skills.

Food

Black Robin will provide you with staple foods from which you will prepare meals for yourself and the group. We do not generally provide snack or junk foods but instead provide the healthy basics such as dried beans, oats, rice, meat - including meat from our farm animals, cheese, vegetables, bread, milk, yogurt, nuts, vegetables, and fruits. We eat lunch together each communal work day (3x per week). Breakfast is on your own and extremely basic (oats, eggs, bread, fruit) but lunch is more elaborate. We encourage each Wwoofer to cook a lunch a week for the crew. Dinner is on your own, with staples and other basic ingredients we provide.

A few notes:

1) We do have an indoor shower but we try hard to use it sparingly, only for short showers and only two or three times a week per Volunteer, 2) our accommodations are small campers which are almost always shared (2 to 4 volunteers per camper), or hammock spots, 3) we work hard and try to work efficiently – even if it’s only for 30 hours a week (it can be exhausting for those days we work! ((I am, ahem, a micromanager and task-master when it comes to farm and construction work. I also get a bit tunnel visioned during the work-day and concentrate primarily on how we can get as much quality work done as possible. Fair warning!) 4) we are constantly changing and (hopefully) improving our farm; sometimes things are messy, in transition, rough, etcetera!, 5) we are not experts and are learning right alongside our volunteers! 6) Winter, spring, and fall work can be cold and miserable sometimes and we can only afford to heat the campers or other accommodations when people are in them and using them (Plus, we are also trying to encourage permaculture practices such as sustainability and a near zero carbon footprint)… We do not heat campers in the summer, though nights can get cold. 7) If you Wwoof with us in the winter you will definitely be cold at times and you will need lots of blankets and sleeping bags and winter clothing in order to keep somewhat warm, 8) We do not have laundry facilities or WIFI in the accommodations or on the farm, 9) We take commitments seriously so if you commit to come to the farm for a month, for instance, we really need you to stay the entire time (otherwise we will be short-handed and unable to find a replacement volunteer), 10) If you commit, start working, then have any issues with the work or the farm, we ask that you not quit early but instead bring those up to us right away so we can work with you on them. 11) If you understand these notes and still are interested in volunteering here, then great! If some of these notes worry you then that is fine also and Black Robin might be a better fit once we are past our growing pains and have more amenities! 12) Many of the educational opportunities at Black Robin are after-hours and do not count as work hours. So, to get the most out of your experience you should plan to spend more than 30 hours per week engaged with Black Robin activities. 13) :-)  Thanks!

TO APPLY: Please fill out the following Application & Questionnaire and send it on to us!

Volunteer Application & Questionnaire:

Personal Information
Full Name
Date of Birth
Phone #
Permanent Mailing Address
Email address

Emergency Contact Information
Full Name
Relationship to Applicant
Phone #
Email address

Health insurance company
Policy
Effective date

1. Why are you interested here and the work we will be doing this coming season?
2. What are you hoping to learn and do during your stay on our farm?
3. What dates are you applying for?
4. Do you have any transportation needs for arrival/departure?
5. Do you have any health issues or physical injuries (e.g. back or knee problems, a hernia), that will affect your ability to perform strenuous tasks?
6. Do you smoke?
7. We occasionally process chickens, goats, sheep, and rabbits on-farm. Are you comfortable with humane slaughter and meat consumption, even if you are not yourself a meat-eater?
8. Do you have any questions or additional needs that you would like to have answered or addressed during the application process?
9. What skills do you have?
10. What have you done at previous jobs?
11. What are your hobbies?
12. Have you ever lived communally before, somewhat 'off the grid', in a small camper, for an extended period?
13. What else would you like us to know about you?
14. Do you have any special dietary restrictions?
15. Have you read our entire profile?
16. Have you read all the references we have on our wwoofusa.org profile? (You should! They are all instructive, both the good ones and the bad...)
17. If an intern/volunteer leaves the farm before their agreed-upon time is up it can be traumatic for the farm and for you and for the morale of the team. After reading our profile and references, why do you think you will be able to stick it out for the dates you suggested above? If things are not as you hoped they would be are you willing to discuss the issue with us so that we may help solve the problem(s)?
18. Do you think that you've read enough about this place to understand the difficulties and challenges of farming, of working here in particular, and of having a pretty tough supervisor? :-)
19. And understanding these difficulties and challenges do you still want to apply to work at here? Y / N If so, why?
20. Please provide at least one reference (but preferably three) who can vouch for the quality of your work and the strength of your character.

Describe yourself, your family, background, farming experience, philosophy, goals and interests

Black Robin

Black Robin is located on four acres just on the eastern edge of Bozeman, Montana. It is bordered by Sourdough Creek, and includes a pond, greenhouse, smokehouse, classroom and studios, farmhouse, cabin, campers for volunteers, outdoor eating and hang-out area, a newly-planted orchard, several garden plots, tiny house construction site, grape arbor, hugelkultur berms, and pasture/open space for our livestock. Black Robin is a couple minutes by bike from downtown Bozeman, the public library, Montana State University, the farmers market, a stop for the free bus line, and a few seconds away from miles of biking, hiking, and cross-country skiing trails. Bozeman, in turn, is a few hours away from Yellowstone and Glacier National Parks, dozens of hot springs, many Indian Reservations, and numerous National and State Forests and recreation areas.

Black Robin's Mission

At Black Robin we strive to use the land wisely, grow organic, work toward sustainability and self-sufficiency, eat healthy, experiment with efficient permaculture, agriculture, animal husbandry, and homesteading skills and then demonstrate those skills to kids, families and young adults.

Describe the physical setting of your farm and the nature of the community in which you live

We give interns three or four days off every week OR (more likely) one or two weeks off per month. You will be working partial farm hours, which escalate during planting and during peak season. When you do get time off, Bozeman offers more than even the locals can fully explore: Bozeman is in the best part of Montana (we think) and is close to many Native American reservations, national parks (including Yellowstone and Glacier), and great outdoors activities, hot springs (six within two hours or so from the farm), etc.

Describe your farm operation

When the deer spare them, we have apple, plum, pear, and cherry trees. When the bears spare them we have goats, fish, ducks, and geese. Larger projects last season included planting trees, building a tiny structure, building a soap making studio, and landscaping. In previous years we have built a tiny structure, pond, masonry smoke-house, outdoor kitchen, rabbit hutch, chicken coop, hugelkultur berms, root cellar, and renovated our barn to include a classroom where we can teach permaculture to kids and hold other community workshops. We have also worked on classroom and farmhouse construction, tiny house building, curriculum development and implementation, a new greenhouse, more fence, additional trees and other edibles, raising fish, weeding, planting cover crops, grains, and gardens, fine-tuning the root cellar, terracing berms. In the future we may also work on installing solar power, designing a grey water system, landscaping pond and wetland, timber-framing and masonry, restoring a stream bank, mulching and composting.

We are primarily an educational farm. Our work is primarily construction, weeding, landscaping, and educating kids.

Describe the work to be performed by applicant

Interns do everything possible and imaginable on an organic and diverse farm. This runs the gamut from milking goats, bottle feeding, shoveling, to building a greenhouse, planting crops, and weeding. Currently we are building quite a bit of infrastructure so we have lots of construction work to do.. There is lots of romance and beauty on a farm, but there is also lots of work!

What Work We Do

At Black Robin we generally work three eight-hour or four six-hour days a week, OR (more likely) we work two straight weeks and then take two weeks off. In addition we work three hours per week on chores and individual farm projects. We work efficiently and intensely with only one break for lunch so that we can finish our work in this very short amount of time. Much of the work at Black Robin is physically demanding (digging, sawing, using a pick-ax), plenty is tedious (weeding, path making, hand digging and cultivation of gardens), and some requires skill-development and careful attention to detail (construction, milking goats, bottle-feeding lambs and goats).

A typical day at Black Robin has us waking up quite early for chores and meal preparation, eating breakfast together or separately, then meeting for an overview of the day's plan. We do a warm up stretching and motivation session then begin to work. We may weed gardens or pull seed heads from pasture weeds for an hour or so, then begin individual or small group projects such as hauling wood chips for paths, adding compost to gardens, sanding rough cut boards for construction, building a wall, pouring a concrete footing, mucking out livestock quarters, etcetera. In the middle of the work day we eat lunch together. After work (in the afternoon and evening and on our days off) we do our chores and farm projects.

What do you expect of a worker?

The following seem to be characteristics of volunteers who are happy with their Black Robin experience: they come to Black Robin prepared to really work (not only, for instance, to see Montana or get a free place to stay for a month); they enjoy hard work; they know what farm and homesteading work entails; perhaps they have worked on a farm or at a very demanding job before; they are not afraid to get dirty, to sweat, to have their muscles ache after work; they communicate well and are willing to ask their supervisor for special accommodations in case they are feeling overworked; they are generally positive people; they understand and accept that there might be a better, more efficient, quicker way to do chores and they strive to find that way; they are willing to try anything; they want to learn as much as possible; they realize a certain amount of drudgery and repetition may be required at a farm; they are willing to do monotonous tasks such as hauling wood-chips or weeding for (occasionally) several hours a day; they are flexible enough to accept when conditions are not as they expected them to be; they can deal with working very quickly and efficiently.

Describe the learning and educational opportunities available to a worker

What You Will Learn

When you stay long enough at Black Robin you will learn some or most of the following: a new meaning of "hard work", construction skills, how to use power tools, how to measure and plan for a construction job, how to pour concrete, weeding and weed management, general labor skills, gardening, orchard care, soap-makinig, basic homesteading, animal care, cheesemaking, goat milking, sausage making, animal slaughtering and butchering (rarely these days), landscaping basics, pond management, tree planting and care, minor veterinary, and other skills.

Describe what other occupation(s) you have

I am a wannabe filmmaker and writer

Please attach any photos of your farm and operation

Type of Farm (Other)

Permaculture, Educational, Homestead, Ceramics, Art

Pay Rate

Housing plus a small stipend for volunteers and interns who work over 24 hours/week at Black Robin.

Pay/Stipend
Black Robin does not pay its interns or volunteers. However, in order to help longer term volunteers to pay for their living expenses (laundry, snacks, other foods we don't provide, toiletries, personal items, gas for driving or being driven to events, travel, admission fees into National Parks and hot springs, etcetera) we may (depending on funding) provide a very small stipend. Volunteers must complete a full five week session before being eligible for the stipend. In addition, interns (full season volunteers) may be given a slightly larger stipend as they work more hours. Volunteers may elect to use their stipend instead to fund the mini-vacation.

First full session (150 hours): $50
Second full session: $50 + $25 bonus*
Third full session: $50 + $50 bonus
Additional work: (before 25 May, during mini-vacations, after 21 September, $50 + $50 bonus)
*Bonuses will be given to volunteer at the conclusion of their agreed-upon time commitment at Black Robin.


Personal Garden and Livestock

If you arrive early and stay long enough at Black Robin you may plant and tend your own garden space and use, save, or sell your produce. You may also adopt and raise your own lamb or goat and keep, sell, or harvest your animal at the end of the season.

Currently Hiring

Yes

Do you have a website, social media account, or job posting anywhere else?

Yes

Online Listing URL

http://blackrobin.org