Thinking of starting a Transition Initiative?
Are you thinking about starting a new Transition initiative in your town, village or city? I was among those who initiated Transition Dartmouth Park, in North London, around a year and a half ago.

We recently held a core group away day, and after a shared, home-made and home grown lunch, we sat down to reflect on what we’d achieved over the last year, what had gone well, and where we needed to focus energy next.
Mostly, once we looked back at the projects we had managed to set up, how they were going and the events we had held, we were pleasantly surprised.
But of course not everything goes to plan and for every great success there will be things you could have done better, or would have been better not doing at all.
So from the relatively recent experience of starting a new initiative, here are some take-home tips:
- Think about it a lot before doing anything
I first considered starting Transition Dartmouth Park about nine months before I actually did anything. Similar in time to pregnancy (!) that time was well spent in preparation for the actual process. Initiating Transition in your neighbourhood is a huge undertaking, and will take all of your spare time and more besides. So far I have found it to be worth the commitment, but initiators are with the process for a good while, even once others are on board, so it’s worth being sure it’s a step you’re ready to take.
- Map your area
Lyn (who initiated TDP with me) and I did this in several ways. We looked at the geographical area, whether a new TI was needed – as we already had neighbouring groups, what was Dartmouth Park, and where the grey areas where. And then what hubs there were – the two parades of shops, the library, the primary school, farmers market, secondary schools, the six or so council estates – where was community located?
- Get to know your neighbours
We considered what pre-existing groups were in the area – political parties, the Conservation Area Committee, the Friends of the Library (which had just fought a successful campaign), the PTA. What were the main age and social groups? This thinking was invaluable as it gave us places and people to start talking to and an idea of who we needed to get to the initiating meeting. It also gave us a ready-made list of people and organisations to network with once we began. And although one of the things which came up at the away day is that we still have a lot of this work to do, and not enough capacity to do it; in our first eighteen months we have achieved good working relationships with the primary school, both community centres, local councillors, the library, Conservation Area Committee and several tenants associations. And so far our core group has representation from many other local organisations.
- Start projects
We made a decision before our launch event that we wanted to start projects as soon as possible. Although much of the advice from the Transition Companion and Transition Network website is geared towards spending a good amount of time awareness-raising through events first, before building up capacity for projects (which is reasonably sensible); we felt that the best way of letting people know what Transition was and how it was different, was to actually start doing it – but to locate projects in community hubs where people could see them and hopefully get involved. Mostly this has worked – the food growing project we started at a local community centre, our monthly knitting and making group, and the after school gardening club we started with the primary school are all still going strong, are attracting people and are now in their second year. But prepare for the fact that not everything will work – Lyn and I started a growing project on our council estate and although I ended up with a great crop of vegetables, few people got involved.
- Don’t have too many meetings
Most people don’t have a culture of going to meetings outside of work, meetings sound like work and can be dull or alienating. We have one core group meeting a month, we keep it short (an hour and a half), and have tried to keep those meetings casual and inviting. So sometimes we bring food to share, once – memorably – Lyn arrived with hot rhubarb crumble, made with rhubarb she had picked in our garden that day, and try not to be too rigid about the agenda and process. Our project groups don’t have meetings, we talk while we’re gardening or knitting. Our home energy metering project have meetings that are also events, so they’ll have a speaker or show a film and then talk about next steps for the project.
- Use the Transition Network website
For the first few months particularly, and for a lot of the first year, I found the Transition Ingredients invaluable for advice on how to do things and the next steps to take. We didn’t follow them religiously, or really in order (see point 4) but there’s lots of practical advice (like how to set up an email newsletter), and the experiences of others, which is great.
- Talk to other Transitioners
We were lucky to have several neighbouring groups – people from Transition Tufnell Park and Transition Kentish Town came along to our launch event, and Jo Homan from Transition Finsbury Park spoke at our first film night. But if you don’t have a nearby group, most Transitioners are pretty approachable and have email addresses, and there is of course, the social reporting blog – a wealth of stories, experiences and contacts to draw on!

I don’t want to sugar coat it – it’s incredibly hard work, not everyone sticks around, sometimes nobody will come to a workshop, and it’s hard to have time to do all of the things you need to do to get people knowing about it and to make it all work.
But so far we’ve had a lot of fun, begun to make some small changes in the area and contributed to the sense of Dartmouth Park community, so I’d say it has definitely been worth it.
Transition Network
BillT on Thu, 23rd May 2013 12:46 pm
No, I’m not. I am moving to the country away from the city and will farm and work with my neighbors to be independent. However, I expect them to teach me more than I teach them.
You see, most Filipinos are already self sufficient and independent to a large extent. They never had cars or A/C or any of the I toys to swallow their labor. Just a lifestyle of enjoying life, no matter what the income is or isn’t. I have never seen any kids that didn’t smile and play just like any other kid. Or parents that didn’t see that they had the ‘necessities’ of life if not the Western distractions.
Living is a serious business in most of the world. I think that Westerners are going to relearn that hard lesson soon.
BillT on Thu, 23rd May 2013 1:13 pm
BTW: I typed this in reply below, but it fits here also…
Airwicky, you are corect that we have a tendency to ‘laziness’. After all, we had many thousands of years of hunter-gatherer lifestyle to over come. Then it only took a few hours per day, max, to ‘make a living. Food was grown locally and shelter was simple. Clothing was furs left over from dinner. Weapons lay on the ground waiting to be chipped and tied into mastodon killers. When food got scarce, you walked to another valley.
It was farming, quickly followed by banking that destroyed all that ‘laziness’. Now we barely have time to reproduce and certainly not much leisure to enjoy sex for pleasure as it was meant to be.
Imagine. Get up, eat some left over mastodon, some berries on the nearby bush, and some clear clean cool water from the stream nearby and then do what ever you want until you get hungry again. Maybe on a busy day, you go out with the boys on a hunting trip to bring home the bacon for another few days of feasting and lazy sex with your women.
BRRRIING! Wake up! Time to go to the office! Grab a cup of coffee and fight traffic for an hour, have the boss look at his watch as you walk in a minute late, sit in front of a glowing piece of plastic, eat some cardboard food at the local greasy spoon, go back for more sitting, then drive back through the traffic, and eat another fast food meal, mow the lawn, fix the leaking sink and kiss your strange kids good night, trying to remember their names, and fall into bed. Rinse and repeat for 50 years.
Now, which life would you choose? The modern one or the lazy ‘transition’ one? ^_^