Maybe find a wood working supply place nearby and see if they have special interest groups or do on-site training. I know locally here, the Woodcraft store gives classses in this huge wood shop with all sorts of wonderful tools set up that they hope you'll fall in love with and buy someday. It's a good way to get access to a machine you might not be able to justify for yourself, like a thickness planer wider than 13". For some reason, 13" and under units are reasonable, but the price jumps a couple/few thousand dollars when you go over that width.
Likewise, some community colleges have classes pretty reasonably that get you the same thing - an embarassment of riches in high-end tools that you have free run of for the length of the class. Buddy of mine likes to do metalwork and keeps taking the same class over and over for that very reason. He can do casting, milling, cutting, welding, etc. for the 12-14 weeks the class runs, and I think tuition only runs him $150 or so. Pretty reasonable for access to tens of thousands of dollars worth of high-end machinery and expert help for months on end.