Hello there! My name is Zoë Johnson, I am a second year student studying at Antioch College in yellow springs Ohio, here I will document my cooperative and experiential learning process and experience on my very first co-op, CampHill Copake. CampHill is a (almost) self sustaining intentional community that supports and cares for people with special needs under the utilization of Waldorf practices.
My time at camphill has come to an end! I enjoyed myself severely in the bakery and will never forget it! It saddens me that the last few days were not spent in the bakery due to covid concerns but all and all I couldn’t have asked for a safer, successful, or more comfortable and interactive first co-op! Especially during these uncertain times. So again, thanks CampHill bakery and all who inhabit and care for it! 
We’re doing inventory and spring cleaning in the bakery! As you can imagine it’s tedious and never ending! ft. Sorting out bad grains and tossing out old breads to the pigs!
Non-bakery related but: I Went on a fun / scary weekend hike to a waterfall (on a trail coated in a 1 inch layer of melting ice, going upward) two weekends ago and it was the most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen.
On Thursdays I run the bakery by myself with the help of two other volunteers who are part time in the bakery, it’s often a rather slow monotonous day but today we started making the weekly Challah bread and that really spiced things up! This is my favorite bread to make and eat! When I was attending the Waldorf school I went to as a kid we made it and ate it for lunch! It was my favorite thing then and still is now!
The bakery also came up with a new bread this week, it’s called ‘it’s bread’ and it’s ridiculously funny. It’s a simple whole wheat sandwich bread, nothing fancy here at all lol 
I made the Focaccia bread again this week! This week I learned how to fold the dough better, how to measure out the loaves and how to prepare them for baking!
 Wednesday, I learned how to oven bake the baguettes! So fun and so satisfying!
*the last photo shows how one loaf had more Elasticity in it's dough and better took to the stretching and baking of the yeasty dough after being scorn