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Easy-on-the-Wallet Volunteer Trips

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The “volunteer vacation” is a widely misunderstood travel concept. The programs involve domestic or international travel for the purpose of performing socially beneficial labor. You assist various groups in building low-cost housing, teaching English, digging wells, maintaining hiking trails or performing other useful tasks.

Even though you work hard at these services, usually you don’t receive free room and board in return, especially if the program is three weeks or less. The planning, preparation and administration of such programs cost money, for which the sponsoring organization requires a fee from the volunteer.

And though such charges are usually much smaller than those of a commercial tour, they can be substantial, and they rarely include transportation to the site, which the volunteer must cover.

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Still, some volunteer programs charge only nominal sums, and a handful pick up basic room and board. (Keep track of whatever expenses you incur because some may be tax deductible.)

Here are five affordable and soul-satisfying examples of a volunteer vacation to consider.

* Willing Workers on Organic Farms (“WWOOF”), care of New England Small Farm Institute, P.O. Box 608, Belchertown, MA 01007; (413) 323-4531, www.wwoof.org. This group assigns its volunteers from all over the world (all ages, though most are young and earthy types) to learn farming techniques while helping a network of mostly family-run organic farms in Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Europe and Korea.

You join a small team on each farm, pitch in with daily chores and acquire firsthand organic farming techniques, like pesticide-free planting and compost fertilizing. You can usually count on some sheepherding, sowing, harvesting, milking of cows and making cheese and yogurt.

Time commitment: usually a few days but as much as a few months, depending on your host farm. Cost: a $30 membership fee, then your half-day’s work pays for a full day’s room and meals. Air fare and other costs are the participant’s responsibility. Requirements: a willing heart and a strong back; no age limit.

* Wilderness Volunteers, P.O. Box 22292, Flagstaff, AZ 86002; (888) 737-2888, www.wildernessvolunteers.org. This group works with public land agencies to promote outdoor volunteering in America’s wild lands.

Each trip lasts a week; has 12 or fewer participants, who sleep in tents or in a dorm; and includes such tasks as restoring streams, planting trees, repairing trails or taking inventory of species on national park, Forest Service and other public lands. Guides do the cooking with the help of participants, and there’s ample time to explore the wilderness you are helping preserve.

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Groups vary in age, but the organization tends to attract active people from 20 to 40. Locations include California, Hawaii, Utah, Wyoming, Washington, Oregon and Puerto Rico.

Time commitment: one week. Cost: $198 per week (not including transportation to and from a park and your own camping gear). Requirements: age 16 and older, and physically fit.

* El Porvenir, 2508 42nd St., Sacramento, CA 95817; (916) 736-3663, www.elporvenir.org. It builds village water projects in now-peaceful Nicaragua.

Volunteers in six- to 10-person “brigades” join with local residents and bilingual guides to construct wells, latrines and community washing facilities. There’s time to visit and converse with Nicaraguan organizations and groups. Lodgings are in private homes, village schools or modest hotels, and the stay includes a recreational weekend at a beach. Participants’ ages vary.

Time commitment: two weeks. Cost: $325 per week, including food, lodging and land transportation (but not air fare). Requirement: physical fitness. No Spanish language skills or construction experience needed.

* La Sabranenque, Rue de la Tour l’Oume, 30290 Saint Victor la Coste, France; (716) 836-8698 in the United States, www.sabranenque.com. It works to preserve and restore the ancient architecture of the Provence region of France and far northern regions of Italy.

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Work includes construction and restoration of medieval stone buildings, castles and ramparts. From March through October, volunteers labor at sites with experienced technicians, acquiring traditional Mediterranean techniques of stonecutting, roof tiling, flooring, masonry and arch and vault construction.

Costs cover double occupancy in restored stone houses, and family-style meals with your co-volunteers. (Groups are limited to 35.) Volunteers are of all ages.

Time commitment: two to three weeks. Cost: $225 per week, not including air fare. The three-week Italy and France program is $430 per week. Requirements: ages 18 and up, and physical fitness. No construction skills or knowledge of French or Italian are necessary.

* Sierra Club Service Outings, 85 2nd St., 2nd Floor, San Francisco, CA 94105; (415) 977-5522, www.sierraclub.org/outings. Outings are short stints at clearing trails in Nevada, maintaining beaches in Puerto Rico, preserving historical sites in Utah, tracking dolphin patterns on Midway Island, removing invasive plants in California or numerous other useful tasks in the outdoors.

Groups of 10 to 18, including a leader and cook, stay in accommodations ranging from tents to lodges. Most participants are in their mid-40s to early 50s, though groups often include retirees. Some trips can be strenuous, but most are accessible to everyone.

Time commitment: Most trips last one week; some are 10 days. Cost: $295 to $495 per week. Requirements: ages 18 and older. There are also special trips for 15-to-19-year-olds.

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