I can't tell if this is serious or not
I think many in the thread are not serious. I think a few are serious...but not well grounded in reality. I think a few are serious and have some idea what would be involved, but I'm not sure it's enough in that last group for the project to happen. The big problem is location. We're too spread out. I mean, think about it: if you could pitch in $100 for what basically amounts to a couple acres of communal campground, would you? I bet some of us would. And there probably really are a couple people who could casually throw a few thousand dollars at something like this if they really wanted to.
The problem is that, those of us able to put in thousands...we could simply buy property on our own without bay12, and we could buy something close enough to us personally that we'd actually visit it from time to time. Lake I mentioned earlier in the thread, I've done this. I bought land in Lake Arrowhead a few years back, planning to build my own house as a fun project that would eventually result in a vacation home. Check youtube. Plenty of people do this. We all need hobbies. Problem I found was that it's a crazy-ridiculous amount of work.
But...if it were a communal project, that workload would be distributed among people with more suitable inclinations and skills. $10,000 for a couple of acres of land...that's nice, but I'm not likely to build a house on my own. But $100 for a "for fun" project that a dozen different people would randomly contribute to over a couple years? Sure.
I can imagine driving for a couple hours to a site with a couple hundred dollars worth of cinder blocks and concrete, camping over the weekend in the
shack that Glloyd had built a few months prior, leaving the materials. Come back a few months later to find somebody had built a flat foundation, a firepit, and oh...looks like somebody cut down a dozen trees with a chainsaw and they're in a pile over there. Bring a friend, make smores. Show up the next summer and oh, looks like somebody had a
steel shipping crate hauled and laid on the foundation. And, oh look. It's full of earth dome bags and several dozen
wooden pallets that somebody scavenged for free from local hardware stores. Come back next summer, see that the logs boards from the pallets are now a half-finished cabin. Maybe somebody will finish it at some point.
But again, the problem is location. If we can get enough of us close enough that it's "a couple hours drive" I could see that sort of development over a couple years. Summer vacations, weekends with friends, etc. But the more I think about it the more skeptical I am that this is realistic if it requires airfare and car rentals for most of us even just to get there. There are going to be a lot more of us willing and able to toss in a $100 for a "sure, why not?" project and then drive 100 miles once or twice a year than there are people willing and able to spend $100...but also willing to spend $500 on airfare and car rental every time they want to visit.