Thursday, December 07, 2006

Solutions

Permaculture Definitions

-Permaculture is a design system for creating sustainable human environments.

Defined From Bill Mollison:

-Permaculture: the use of ecology as the basis for designing integrated systems of food production, housing, appropriate technology, and community development. Permaculture is built upon an ethic of caring for the earth and interacting with the environment in mutually beneficial ways.

From the Permaculture Drylands Institute, published in The Permaculture Activist (Autumn 1989):

-Permaculture (PERMAnent agriCULTURE or PERMAnent CULTURE) is a sustainable design system stressing the harmonious interrelationship of humans, plants, animals and the Earth.

From Lee Barnes (former editor of Katuah Journal and Permaculture Connections), Waynesville, North Carolina:

To paraphrase the founder of permaculture, designer Bill Mollison:

-Permaculture principles focus on thoughtful designs for small-scale intensive systems which are labor efficient and which use biological resources instead of fossil fuels. Designs stress ecological connections and closed energy and material loops. The core of permaculture is design and the working relationships and connections between all things. Each component in a system performs multiple functions, and each function is supported by many elements. Key to efficient design is observation and replication of natural ecosystems, where designers maximize diversity with polycultures, stress efficient energy planning for houses and settlement, using and accelerating natural plant succession, and increasing the highly productive "edge-zones" within the system.

-Permaculture is: the design of land use systems that are sustainable and environmentally sound; the design of culturally appropriate systems which lead to social stability; a design system characterized by an integrated application of ecological principles in land use; an international movement for land use planning and design; an ethical system stressing positivism and cooperation. In the broadest sense, permaculture refers to land use systems which promote stability in society, utilize resources in a sustainable way and preserve wildlife habitat and the genetic diversity of wild and domestic plants and animals. It is a synthesis of ecology and geography, of observation and design. Permaculture involves ethics of earth care because the sustainable use of land cannot be separated from life-styles and philosophical issues.

From Michael Pilarski, founder of Friends of the Trees, published in International Green Front Report (1988):

-Permaculture is a practical concept which can be applied in the city, on the farm, and in the wilderness. Its principles empower people to establish highly productive environments providing for food, energy, shelter, and other material and non-material needs, including economic. Carefully observing natural patterns characteristic of a particular site, the permaculture designer gradually discerns optimal methods for integrating water catchment, human shelter, and energy systems with tree crops, edible and useful perennial plants, domestic and wild animals and aquaculture.

From a Bay Area Permaculture Group brochure, published in West Coast Permaculture News & Gossip and Sustainable Living Newsletter (Fall 1995):

-Permaculture adopts techniques and principles from ecology, appropriate technology, sustainable agriculture, and the wisdom of indigenous peoples. The ethical basis of permaculture rests upon care of the earth-maintaining a system in which all life can thrive. This includes human access to resources and provisions, but not the accumulation of wealth, power, or land beyond their needs<>ATTRA - National Sustainable Agriculture Information Service http://attra.ncat.org/attra-pub/perma.html


Ethics


  1. Care of the Earth
  2. Care of the People
  3. Return and sharing of Surplus

Principles

  1. Work with nature, rather than against the natural elements, forces, pressures, processes, agencies, and evolutions, so that we assist rather than impede natural developments.
  2. The problem is the solution; everything works both ways. It is only how we see things that makes them advantageous or not (if the wind blows cold, let us use its strength and its coolness to advantage). A corollary of this principle is that everything is a positive resource; it is just up to us to work out how we may use it as such.
  3. Make the least change for the greatest possible effect.
  4. The yield of a system is theoretically unlimited. The only limit on the number of uses of of a resources possible within a system is in the limit of the information and the imagination of the designer.
  5. Everything gardens, or has an effect on its environment.

http://www.permaculture.biz/mollison.htm

Common Techniques and Strategies

By Julianne Skai Arbor

-Site Analysis and Inventory
-Mapping
-Designing with zones and sectors
-Sheet Mulching
-Swales
-Chickens Tractors
-Edible Food Forest
-Plant Guilds
-Native Plants
-Small Scale Intensive
-Herb Spirals
-Greywater systems


Benefits of well-developed permaculture projects include:

-Conserving and building healthy soils, the basis of food systems.

-Diversifying and greatly increasing local food production (typically from a few sources to dozens, even hundreds), which increases the nutritional quality and pleasure of local diets and buffers against market fluctuations in food prices.

-Eliminating use of toxic chemicals that cause a variety of health problems from immediate toxic poisonings to longer-term chronic problems like cancer, birth defects and the destruction of healthy natural food source (i.e. toxic fish).

-Maximizing efficient beneficial use of local water sources, the critical lifeblood for people.

-Practically eliminating pollution of water by human wastes, thereby dramatically reducing water born diseases.

-Creating clean drinking water sources, further reducing disease.

-Increasing tree crops, which retain soils, slow water runoff, increase groundwater storage, and provide cooling shade.

-Increasing the beauty of the community though the creation of diverse life forms - flowers, insects, birds, frogs, and hundreds of others that create a pleasant and inspiring atmosphere for people, especially children.

-Harnessing natural renewable energies to create comfortable home living conditions.
http://www.essentiallivingfoods.com/permaculture.html


Combines Disciplines Examples


*Agriculture and Horticulture

Landcare
-Soil conservation
-Reafforestation
-Agroforestry
-Analog forestry
-Organic farming
-Biological pest control
-Kitchen gardens in cities and villages

Integrated farming systems:
-Aquaculture
-Aquaponics
-Intercropping
-Companion planting and polyculture
-Perennial and tree cropping systems.
-Trellising
-Worm composting

Gardening techniques:
-Utilizing crop rotations
-Cover crops
-Green manures
-Composts
-Mulches
-Medicinal plants
-Useful plants/edible landscaping
-Heritage plant varieties
-Seed saving

Bioregional planning
-citizen action
-cooperative organization
-micro-enterprise
-community credit schemes
-barter and LETS systems

*Appropriate Technology

Water collection
-Greywater reuse
-Rain & runoff catchment
-Swaling
-Constructed wetlands
-Fungal systems for wastewater treatment.

Energy
-Passive solar heating
-Solar and wind power
-Solar water pasteurizers







Resources

PERMACULTURE EDUCATION CENTERS:

Free permaculture designers manual
http://permaculture.wikia.com/wiki/Main_Page

http://www.essentiallivingfoods.com/permaculture.html

International
Kleiwerks International Earth Building

The Wilder Institute

North American

West
Permaculture Institute of Northern California/Regenerative Design Institute, California

Center for Natural Design, California

The Alameda Point Collaborative, California

International Institute for Ecological Agriculture, California

The Mendocino Ecological Learning Center, California

Lost Valley, Oregon

Sacred Earth Institute, Oregon

Ecoversity, New Mexico

East

Earthhaven, North Carolina

Gesundheit! Institute, West Virginia

Fingerlakes Permaculture Institute, New York

Central

Rhizome collective, Austin TX

Austin Progressive Calendar, TX


Magazines

Permaculture Activist magazine
Information on permaculture design, edible landscaping, bioregionalism, cooperative action, aquaculture, natural building, earthworks, renewable energy, practical solutions to the challenges of Real Life, and much more. We provide a current listing of upcoming permaculture design courses and a valuable global networking directory linking students to teachers and information, homeowners to designers and consultants, homeseekers to community, and hope and help for all who desire a healthy happy planet that cares for it's people
http://www.permacultureactivist.net/

Books


This links to the Cascadia annoted bibliography page that list all permaculture books!
http://www.cascadiapermaculture.com/perma_biblio.pdf

Permaculture: A Designers' Manual
A comprehensive study guide; the bible of Permaculture. By Mollison, Bill. Island Press Covelo, CA, 1990. Pc.

The Best of Permaculture: A Collection. By Lindegger and Tap, ed. Nascimanere Nambour. Great stuff from the first 10 years or so of permaculture.

Earth User's Guide to Permaculture. By Morrow, Rosemary. Simon & Schuster, 2000. An informal introduction to permaculture by an experienced teacher.

The Future is Abundant. Korn, Snyder and Musick, ed. Tilth.

A guide to sustainable agriculture; OP, needs to be re-done, the first bioregional Pc handbook.

Gaia's Garden: A Guide to Home-Scale Permaculture.
Easy to use and understand tour through the permaculture garden. By Toby Hemenway. Chelsea Green, 2001.

Introduction to Permaculture.
The best intro, includes a concise listing of principles. By Slay, Reny, and Mollison, Bill. Tagari 91 Tyalgum. principles.

Living Community.
The evolution of a premier permaculture site, written by a master designer. By Haggard, Ben. Center for the Study of Community, 4018 Old Santa Fe Trail, Santa Fe NM, 87505.

The Permaculture Garden. Bell, Graham. Thorson's, 1994. A British-oriented introduction to permaculture gardening techniques.

The Permaculture Way. Graham Bell. Thorsons, London 1992. Simple explanation of permaculture in action. Good examples.

Travels In Dreams. Bill Mollison. Tagari 1996. Engaging memoir with stories, stories, stories by the man behind the permaculture movement.

The Western (Aust) Permaculture Manual. Brown, David, ed. Cornucopia, Subiaco, West Australia 1989. From philosophy to nitty-gritty region specific, untidy early Pc from the trenches, OP