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Drop of Stillness - day retreat

Location icon
6401 NE 10th Ave, Portland, OR 97211, USA
Date
May 31, 2025

About this Retreat

Details of this retreat

Touch into the still point at the center amidst our busy schedules. This silent retreat will include seated and walking meditation, chanting service, and movement practice. Join us for a half-day of simply sitting.

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Tentative Schedule 


8 - 8:50 am Zazen meditation
8:50 am Kinhin walking meditation
9:00 am Zazen
9:50 am Chanting service
10:00 am Break
10:15 am Movement practice
10:45 am Zazen
11:20 am Kinhin
11:30 am Zazen
12 pm end

Please consider the option to bring a bag lunch and stay after to eat together.

Led by Community Zen Leaders Onkatsu, Chōon, and Kosho Read More

Getting Here

Location icon Zen Community of Oregon, 6401 NE 10th Ave, Portland, OR 97211, USA

Directions

Ride sharing can be arranged from the airport with some advanced notice with our registrar. The monastery is located 80 miles northwest of Portland, Oregon on twenty forested acres overlooking the Columbia River flood plain. The drive takes 80-90 minutes.

Directions from the airport:
1. Take I-205 North to I-5 North. I-5 North to exit 36 Longview (south of Seattle, north of Portland).
2. At the exit travel west on to 432 towards Longview City Center.
3. At the sign to “Highway 30 to Oregon”, turn left (south) onto “Oregon Way” .
4. Cross the Lewis and Clark Bridge into Oregon.
5. Turn right (west) onto Highway 30 towards Astoria. Clatskanie is 12 miles from this point.
6. In Clatskanie turn right at the stoplight onto Nehalem Street
7. Go straight to the end, and then follow the road left onto 5th street.
8. Stay on this road (do NOT take the first left fork to the Poplar Farm).
9. You will reach a fork after 2.9 miles; stay left, on Quincy-Mayger Road. Following the street signs saying “Zen Monastery”.
10. The Monastery is 1.8 miles past the fork, at 79640 Quincy-Mayger Road on the right. Read More

Accommodation

Overnight guests stay in the guest hall (semi-private dormitory), follow the daily monastery schedule, and share meals with the community. A donation is suggested. Private retreat accommodations are sometimes available for those with significant prior meditation or contemplative experience. Private retreatants can follow their own schedule in solitude.

Venue & Amenities

A/C in Rooms icon A/C in Rooms
Free Wifi icon Free Wifi
Spa icon Spa
Sauna icon Sauna
Pool icon Pool
Towels icon Towels
Free Parking icon Free Parking
Kitchen icon Kitchen
Tour Assistance icon Tour Assistance
Hot Tub icon Hot Tub
Coffee/Tea icon Coffee/Tea
Cafe icon Cafe
Restaurant icon Restaurant
Fitness Center icon Fitness Center
Yoga Studio icon Yoga Studio
Housekeeping icon Housekeeping
Bicycles For Rent icon Bicycles For Rent
The monastery includes a spacious meditation hall, guest and resident dormitories, dining hall, and a large organic vegetable garden.

Within the forest is Great Vow's famous Jizo Garden, a memorial garden for people who have died, and the newly dedicated Shrine of Vows, a place where people leave tokens of their deep aspirations. Read More

Meals

Menu Types

Meals are simple. Breakfast is usually hot grain cereal, nuts or nut butter, dairy and non-dairy milk, fruit, yogurt, and tea. Lunch is the most substantial with a main entree, salad, vegetable side, and condiments. Dinner is soup and bread. Many retreats are served as buffet. Zen-style retreats feature meals that are oriyoki, a Zen form of mindful eating in monasteries that goes back 1,000 years. Imagine Zen tea ceremony, but eating. Newcomers are guided on how to do it and people get the hang of it after a couple days. Meals are vegetarian with vegan options. Gluten-free alternatives can be accommodated. Coffee, caffeinated, and herbal tea are provided. Read More

Customer Reviews

4.92 out of 5.0 average rating

5.0
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A deep experience in a nourishing setting
I appreciated the container that ZCO has built to plunge deeply into practice. Food was astonishingly good. The teachers were incredibly skilled with means of transmitting the dharma, striking the right notes at auspicious times. A most intimate sesshin. Read More

5.0
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Highly recommended
Great Vow’s teachers demonstrate commitment, kindness, and authenticity. Community members and participants show remarkable maturity. Grounds are lovingly maintained. Read More

5.0
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Koan Sesshin is a masterclass
This was a challenging Sesshin. The wake-up bell rang at 4:20; formal tea ended at 9:30. In between, Chozen and Fuho gave explicit instructions on developing concentration and switching from thinking mind to awareness mind. Their dharma talks gave the full context for koan study, but made clear that this was koan practice - a surrender of small mind into big mind. This seemed mysterious at first, but made more sense as the days went by. Koan Sesshin is not for the faint of heart, but worked its magic even on beginning students. Read More

5.0
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Introduction to Zen
A wonderful one day session covering all the basics. The teachers were lovely and I have so much gratitude toward them for all that they shared. Read More

5.0
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One day intro to zen
It was a well-organized, thoughtful day. I wanted to deepen my meditation practice and appreciate this opportunity. Read More

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