Grove & Protogrove Constitution Application Form

You can use the form below to begin the registration process of your Reformed Druid Grove or Protogrove. Note: Submitting the form is not considered "creating an account," nor does it mean the form will necessarily be accepted as-is. Please also note we are collecting your preferred email address, by which you are agreeing to let us contact you for clarification, or to notify of confirmed or declined applications.

When a constitution application is accepted for formal Groves, we will file a copy with the International Druid Archives if you haven't done so already. We will also create an individual webpage for your Grove or Protogrove on this site. It can display additional info about your fellowship and will display your constitution. Once live, we can make changes upon request as long as you contact us from the exact same email address you used in the form. Your email address will be stored in the google account tied to the Google Form with which this application was generated. We will never sell your information, but also note that the Grove Finder table has always contained contact information and is visible to the public.

Fellowship Naming Etiquette

Before starting your registration application, there are a few etiquette guidelines we advise you to follow. We mention this all over the place, but in Reformed Druidism your fellowship can only be called a Grove if you have a Third Order Druid priest in the Order of Dalon Ap Landu with an ordination lineage to David Fisher. We also advise against having Grove as part of your fellowship name (i.e., no "Sacred Grove of the Old World Nemeton") just to reduce the chance of confusing seekers when the fellowship is still just a Protogrove.

We advise coming up with a fellowship name that is unique between all druid orders. Put your fellowship name in quotes in a web search for that exact phrase. Cross reference it with other druid orders like OBOD, ADF, AODA, and others. We don't want to copy names of other Groves, Protogroves, or Seed Groups. An exception would be if you are already running a group by that name in that other druid order. Just know that if you're a Grove in one order, you still might just be a Protogrove in the RDNA.

Lastly, we advise against using defunct fellowship names unless you are rebooting a fellowship that you previously ran. See our list of all known fellowships to have ever existed under the umbrella of Reformed Druidism.