with
Georgia Bowick, Dan Burgess-Milne, Mark Schrader & 1 more
Wangapeka Study & Retreat Centre
Serving the Wangapeka – Serving the Community
All who give service and receive support from the Wangapeka Centre—please hear this call!
When & Where:
—Vision for Wangapeka – a Dharma Community Hui, Saturday 14th December 9am—4pm
—Planning a new Service Programme for 2025, Sunday 15th December 9am—4pm
Come to either day, or both at Wangapeka Study and Retreat Centre
There will be much korero and time to rest, walk and meditate.
Accommodation and food by dana/koha
Vision for Wangapeka – A Dharma Community Hui – Saturday 14 December
How can we better serve the Wangapeka, as a centre for Awakening, and the needs of the wider community in our rapidly changing world?
What is a wholesome trajectory for Wangapeka, given the various challenges and changes that the world is facing and will continue to face in the next few decades?
What kind of creative support can we each offer, to help the Wangapeka community to collaborate, respond to what needs changing, and assist us all to move in that direction?
If these questions interest you, please join a group of our sangha who will be gathering at Wangapeka to ignite and explore this conversation of change. Your input is most welcome. We will begin to explore resilient and responsive ways to support Wangapeka now, and with the future needs for our centre and community.
Dharma Service Programme – Sunday 15 December
You are also welcome to stay on for Sunday (or attend only for this day) to contribute to the planning for the next iteration of a Dharma Service programme at Wangapeka. Following the experimental “Service as the Path” programme in 2024, we would like to hear the voices of a diverse group who love the Wangapeka and feel connected through service. We value and request your involvement in helping to shape a continuing service community.
The retreat takes place on the beautiful Wangapeka whenua nestled in stunning native forests with expansive views down the Wangapeka valley. The land itself provides a healing sanctuary surrounded by mature trees and offering the perfect environment for reflection and reconnection with nature.
Accommodation is included in the price of the retreat, with all rooms being comfortable and well-appointed with single beds and electric heating. Shared bathroom facilities are conveniently located close to all rooms.
All meals are included in this retreat to support the your well-being and focus. Our kitchen team prepares nourishing vegetarian food to sustain and delight you throughout your stay. Specific dietary requirements can be accommodated and self-catering is also possible if you prefer to bring and prepare your own food.
This teaching room is beautifully crafted and has been used for a wide variety of teaching for over 20 years. It has a wooden parquet floor and a pot belly stove to keep away winter chills. Set amongst beautiful mature trees, it offers a charming view looking down the Wangapeka valley, creating an inspiring environment for movement and meditation practices.
The original building at Wangapeka, the Main Hall serves as the heart of community life with its combined living and dining room, library, and welcoming wood burner. Tea, coffee, and snacks are freely available here throughout your stay. Whether you choose to relax in the cosy interior or step out onto the porch to enjoy the expansive views, this space invites connection and contemplation. The hall also houses the kitchen, bathroom facilities, and laundry for your convenience.
Five wisdoms, five activities, five families - investigating awakened nature while learning and unlearning what obstructs liberation in predominantly silent retreat at Wangapeka.
Join friends, co-facilitators and intimacy explorers Camila and Ross for an immersion into the mystery and practice of intimacy. Flowing between stillness and movement, inner and outer, solitude and togetherness, we offer opportunities to give, receive, and savor experiences of authentic connection with yourself, with others, and the natural world.
This five-day retreat is an exploration of the apprenticeship of grief — learning how to turn towards what is difficult, rather than away from it; learning how to be shaped by not-knowing, restraint and humility as acts of reverence.