Autumn Farm

21 December 2012 - 10 January 2013. Filed under category Travel.
Welcome to Autumn Farm

Christmas, New Year and my birthday are all difficult dates for me since I became a nomad. I feel the pressure to be somewhere special and do something extravagant. After stressing about the holidays of 2012, a friend told me about a gay nudist B&B farm called Autumn Farm.

A gay nudist farm… for Christmas? Hell yeah! The question wasn’t if I should go but how quickly I could get there!

Getting There

I needed to get from Wellington to Takaka. Fortunately, there is a direct flight. My suspicions about the flight began when I called them and they asked for my weight. When I arrived at the airport, I saw why. The plane was a tiny-tiny little two-propeller plane. The eighteen-year old kid who ‘checked us in’ (that amounted to asking me if I was going on the plane) turned out to also be the baggage handler and the pilot. It wouldn’t surprise me if he runs Golden Bay Air as a one-man company. He might even have built the plane himself, who knows.

Thinking that we all have to die sometime, I climbed into the co-pilot seat, strapped myself in and then spent 50 minutes watching the kid-pilot do nothing but play with his cell-phone for the duration of the flight.

The Grounds

The main house.

The main house.

Having seen the Autumn Farm website, I expected a non-descript country-house with a large garden. I had been misled. Autumn Farm was in fact a slice of paradise! The garden wasn’t large, it was huge, and wonderfully designed with pathways, trees, a stream, gazebos (I did not attack them.), flowers and lots of penis sculptures. The male member seemed to be something of a theme in the art at Autumn Farm… There was a bathhouse (with a disco ball), a composting toilet (the throne) and a tepee. At night, there was always a brazier burning which people gathered around to tell stories and drink. But best of all was the wood-fired outdoor bathtub. I loved to lie there with a glass of wine and watch shooting stars burn across a night sky decorated with thousands of stars.

Soaking in the wood-fired tub.

Soaking in the wood-fired tub.

Autumn Farm is close to the hippie-town Takaka in the Golden Bay region of New Zealand’s south island. Golden Bay has a genuine rural beauty and many fun places to go. There are plenty of places to go swimming. My favourite was a nearby stream with a five-metre cliff. After seeing a few kids somersault of the damn thing, I pushed myself to at least jump off it. There are also many great beaches, often framed with tall green hills. (as is all of New Zealand btw)

These hills have some good caves as well. Dragon’s Cave isn’t quite as exciting as it sounds, but it is impressive with thousands of bent stalactites. Bent? Yeah, because they are not stalactites shaped by dripping water but rather a kind of algae, which grows more on the sunny side of the stalactite, making them bend towards the cave entrance.

The Community

Peter and Pete

Peter and Pete

Autumn Farm is a community. Don’t come to Autumn Farm to be pampered and waited at as (1) you won’t be and (2) you would miss the whole point of Autumn Farm. It has the community spirit of a hippie commune without forcing you to endure endless prayer circles and crystal-wielding soothsayers.

The conductor of Autumn Farm is Peter, a slightly effeminate Rummy-playing man with a dirty sense of humour that borders on, but never crosses into, sleazy. His partner in bed and business is Pete. I mistook Pete for something of a country-bumpkin when I first met him, but that was my mistake. Pete is in fact a very cool man, and how he manages to cook for 60 people in that tiny little kitchen on what I imagine must be a limited per-head budget is a mystery to me. I never once had a bad meal at Autumn Farm. In fact, I soon buried my diet in the garden as it was clearly a losing game.

The Work

David and I, two busy little wwoofers.

David and I, two busy little wwoofers.

Community spirit in all honour, but the guests were paying guests, and there are plenty of work that they are not expected to do. Peter and Pete work a lot, but they couldn’t possibly run the place without help. Autumn Farm is full of fairies, but none of the magic kind that could maintain this enchanted grove. So who does all the work? Why, the wwoofer slaves of course!

As a wwoofer, you work four hours a day for room and food. You pay nothing, and get paid nothing. It is a popular way for poverty stricken nomads (like yours truly) to travel on a shoestring budget.

I spent my first three days of wwoofing in the garden, hoeing, weeding and planting. After the three days, I got a royal bollocking by Peter for being slow, inept and generally useless. Well duh! He should have known that the second he saw my hands! Smooth as a baby butt. It is obvious to anyone and everyone that I have never done a proper day’s manual labour in my life, so what did he expect? If it weren’t for my new awesome friend and fellow wwoofer David helping me out, I would probably have severed a toe with the shovel.

I pointed out the numerous flaws with Autumn Farm’s current website and general IT setup, and in my remaining wwoofing time, I created a brand new website, halved their monthly IT bill and saved their asses from being branded as spammers by setting them up with a proper newsletter account.

Who’s useless now, ehh?

Summer Camp

IMG_2904_stitch

Christmas this year was a no-starter. 30 degrees Celsius, green grass and naked men do not spell Christmas spirit in my book. I tried to get into the swing of things by listening to the Nightmare Before Christmas, but no…

After Christmas, the week-long Summer Camp event started. On the 27th, about 60 naked men descended on Autumn Farm. The atmosphere went from serene and intimate to social and fun.

The daily rhythm went something like this. I’d spend the morning wwoofing. After lunch, I might go on an excursion or work out in the garden. Around six there was often some kind of special event. Then after dinner, people gathered in the bathhouse (with the shiny disco ball) or around the brazier, flirting the night away and maybe take a bath in the outdoor bathtub.

Some of the special events were delightfully bizarre.

The Masquerade

Seriously Disturbing

Seriously Disturbing

Take sixty odd gay men, throw them several large suitcases with dress-up costumes and you got yourself a masquerade. The winner was a seemingly normal older gentlemen who transformed into … into a… a …  I can’t. It was too horrific. Just check out the picture, then go find yourself a good psychiatrist.

The King and Queen Pageant

A king and queen pageant in a gay resort is an interesting beast. You have no problems finding queens, but the kings are rare. Fortunately, we have other stereotypes to play with, like the leather master. Sort of a king, in a way.

I competed as a duo together with one of those leather masters. I wore his leather harness and one of his leather thongs, acting out the role as a slave puppy. I guess I’m a natural, because we won! Yep, I’m a half king of Autumn Farm, and I wear my thorn-crown with pride!

There is a hilarious video of me darting into the audience fetching a bone(r), but it is a bit too racy for this blog. Sorry peeps, but my mum reads this!

Downtrou Abbey

Every year, Peter writes an innuendo-packed show for the Summer Camp, performed by whatever guests are crazy enough to sign up for such torture. This year, it was a spoof of Downton Abbey.

It was delightfully amateurish, with Peter hissing forgotten lines from stage-left. My personal favourite was when one of the actors hissed back, “We are miles from that line!” On stage arguments between actors and the director… I just wished I had had my popcorn!

I’ve included a taster video, and if you want more (and why wouldn’t you) then you can buy the whole farce for $25. (email stay@autumnfarm.com)

New Year

New Year's Eve at Autumn Farm

On New Year’s Eve, we sent up sky lanterns and then probably shot them down with a large battery of fireworks. You haven’t lived until you’ve seen a naked man dart between firework pieces, through showers of sparks, lighting them. You could smell burning hair. Should have waxed…

Afterwards, I sat by the brazier and contemplated my year past and the one just starting. Sometimes I have to pinch myself to believe all the wonderful places I get to enjoy and the people I meet. This was far (faaaaar) from my traditional Christmas and New Year. I love celebrating the holidays with my family in Sweden, but I need some variety at times, and Autumn Farm could not have delivered more of that!

Happy New Year everybody!

World Wide Opportunities on Organic Farms

Wwoofing is a great way to travel on a limited budget. You are expected to work 3-4 hours and in return, you get free accommodation and food. It exists world-wide, but it is particularly popular in New Zealand and Australia. For nomads, it will never be the solution to the issue of how to make lifelong travel economically sustainable, but it is a good way to see a place for a few weeks without paying steep hotel rates. And it is amazing for meeting other travellers! For more info, see their website.

Travel Updates

I left Autumn Farm on January 10, and I’m now back in Wainuiomata, outside Wellington. On Monday I fly back up to Auckland where I’ll stay until January 26 when I fly to Sydney.

If any of you have tips of what to do in Australia or perhaps would like to host me, contact me!

15

What is the craziest place you've spent Christmas?

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  1. Brother Henrik says:

    I will talk to Tobbe Oxelborn about australia and make him find you on Skype Tobbe and Mia have been in australia for about 10 yers Ago they were traveling around there about 1,5 yers best regards brother Henrik.

  2. crys klier-hoffman says:

    wow za….. glad to see you have come out of your shell, Gustav 🙂
    I’m constantly raving about the gorgeous photos of where you have been , these are no different. what I feel from these is pure joy, you appear even more relaxed and free than ever.
    glad you spared those soft hands, leave the gardening to others, like me, and keep doing what you do best. LIVING DELIBERATELY
    Happy Nomading in 2013

  3. John Doe says:

    Gustav, it was a pleasure meeting you at the farm. You are quite the charmer. Love the write-up! I think you captured Autumn Farm just right!

    Best of luck on your travels!

  4. John Doe says:

    Oh, and for those who don’t get to see Gustav’s performance in the King and Queen competition, let me tell you, you are missing something spectacular!

  5. Allan says:

    Gustav as I was reading this article I was thinking how open you are and I was wondering if your family reads your blog. You then mentioned that your Mum reads it! I admire your openness. Although I am a fully out gay man and hide it from no one; I do keep the more ‘gay’ things to myself and I cant imagine sharing my experience of running into a group of naked men with a bone(r) (if I has had such an experience – I wish I had) or that I was elected the leather King (again, wishful thinking)! I do wish I could be that open. I do sometimes think, but I know its my own insecurity, that straight people cant quite cope with the unusual things we homos do, but I think your blog disproves this. I love the fact you are so open on your site. More please!

    1. OK, to calm down my now hyperventilating mum, I didn’t run into a group of naked men with a boner. I was sent to ‘fetch a bone’ and as a joke, I scampered into the crowd as if I had misunderstood the command. Anyway… 🙂

      It is a balance though, this blog, between wanting to be open and true (which makes the blog a good read and better at inspiring people to live life to the full) and keeping myself from burning any bridge of say future employment etc.

  6. par3182 says:

    You’re arriving on Australia Day – is that a coincidence or did you plan it that way? Remember, the fireworks over Sydney Harbour won’t just be welcoming you (but partly, I’m sure).

    If you eventually make it to Melbourne and need a contact look me up.

    1. Total coincidence, but thanks for the heads-up!

  7. Mike says:

    What a great article, Gustav! Looks like you had a lot of fun at the Farm. You did a fantastic job on the new web site.

    Can’t wait to read about your next adventure in Australia. I do expect to see a very similar photo of you doing this! http://imcdb.org/i105891.jpg

  8. Jono says:

    See, this is what the blog is about and why you do it. It’s funny that I am so desensitised to you homos now (Allan’s words; I would never say “homo”) that I barely noticed…not even the millionth time you said “gay nudist farm”.

    It was just a story about a fun Christmas.

    Probably best not to mention it to the Tongans upstairs though.

  9. Craig Brown says:

    The craziest place I’ve spent Christmas is in my own home. “Nough said.
    This was a really fun post. Here are some thoughts at large…I read the post to my Mom and her only comment was “I don’t think I would be comfortable being naked around so many people”….as I told you privately, your green eyes are gorgeous in the cockpit picture (I wish you had a picture of the 18 year old pilot!)…there are so many ways to be unusual, they aren’t confined to us “homos,” and I know this from personal experience…Fireworks in Sydney Harbour when Gustav arrives? Shhh. Let Gustav thinks its all to celebrate his arrival back into this universe after he slipped into a wormhole over the Pacific on Halloween.

  10. Phil Stevens says:

    From a wobbly and shambolic start on the plane you arrived safely at this gay oasis to let your hair and everything else down, and deservedly so too, sounds like the emerald city has nothing on this place (including the characters). A good healthy dose of nudity, campery and gay male revelry was probably just what you needed at this time, another off the wall experience for you to treasure.
    I’m a bit miffed about your Mum reading this post as its preventing you from sharing with us your hilarious momment of fetching the bone(r), adorned in all your slave puppy leather finery. You big tease! Continue to wear your thorn-crown with pride wherever your travels may take you King Gustav!

  11. Hob says:

    I have been to Autumn Farm several times over 12 years. Every time I have met such wonderful men. Meeting you was wonderful. The web site that you made for me is the best. You were wonderful at teaching me to edit and manage my site. I am now 70 years old. I have had many life adventures and I am still planing more. My next one will be coming out.

    1. Hob, thank you so much for the job offer, the company and these kind words! It was a pleasure meeting you and hope to do so again!

      And the very best luck with coming out to your family. They are lucky to have had a father like you, and fools if they don’t see it.

    2. Craig Bown says:

      Good to hear you planning lots of adventures Mr. Hob! Coming out will be more fulfilling than you expect I bet. That’s the case more often than not. Can you imagine the difference between coming out now and fifty years ago?

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