Permaculture
This summary is taken from Wikipedia and provides
a good overview. As permaculture is quite complex since its been around for over 20 years, learning about the
basics can be found below.
Permaculture is an approach to designing human settlements and agricultural systems that mimic the
relationships found in natural ecologies.
Permaculture is sustainable land use design. This is based on
ecological and biological principles, often using patterns that occur in nature to maximise effect and minimise
work. Permaculture aims to create stable, productive systems that provide for human needs, harmoniously integrating
the land with its inhabitants. The ecological processes of plants, animals, their nutrient cycles, climatic factors
and weather cycles are all part of the picture. Inhabitants’ needs are provided for using proven technologies for
food, energy, shelter and infrastructure. Elements in a system are viewed in relationship to other elements, where
the outputs of one element become the inputs of another. Within a Permaculture system, work is minimised, “wastes”
become resources, productivity and yields increase, and environments are restored. Permaculture principles can be
applied to any environment, at any scale from dense urban settlements to individual homes, from farms to entire
regions.
Permaculture as a systematic method was first practised by
Austrian farmer Sepp Holzer in the 1960s and then scientifically developed by Australians
Bill
Mollison and David
Holmgren and their associates during the
1970s in a series of publications.
The word permaculture is a portmanteau of
permanent agriculture, as well as
permanent culture.
The intent is that, by training individuals in a core set of
design principles, those individuals can design their own environments and build increasingly self-sufficient human
settlements — ones that reduce society's reliance on industrial systems of production and distribution that
Mollison identified as fundamentally and systematically destroying Earth's ecosystems.
|
While originating as an agro-ecological design
theory, permaculture has developed a large international following. This "permaculture community"
continues to expand on the original ideas, integrating a range of ideas of
alternative culture, through a network of publications, permaculture gardens, intentional
communities, training programs, and internet forums. In this way, permaculture has become a form
of architecture of nature and ecology as well as an informal institution of alternative social
ideals.
An example of permaculture using
animals and gardens ---
|
|
Mollison and
Holmgren
In the mid 1970s, Australians Bill
Mollison and David Holmgren started to develop ideas about stable agricultural systems. This was a result of
rapid growth of destructive industrial-agricultural methods. They saw that these methods were poisoning the land
and water, reducing biodiversity, and removing
billions of tons of topsoil from
previously fertile landscapes. They announced their permaculture" approach with the publication of
Permaculture One in
1978.
The term permaculture initially meant "permanent
agriculture" but was quickly expanded to also stand for "permanent culture" as it was seen that social aspects were
integral to a truly sustainable system.
After Permaculture
One, Mollison further refined and developed the ideas by designing
hundreds of permaculture sites and organizing this information into more detailed books. Mollison lectured in
over 80 countries and taught his two-week Design Course to many hundreds of students. By the early 1980s, the
concept had broadened from agricultural systems design towards complete, sustainable
human
habitats.
By the mid 1980s, many of the students had become successful
practitioners and had themselves begun teaching the techniques they had learned. In a short period of time
permaculture groups, projects, associations, and institutes were established in over one hundred countries. In 1991
a four-part Television documentary by ABC productions called "The Global Gardener" showed permaculture applied to a
range of worldwide situations, bringing the concept to a much broader public. Excerpts are available online
through YouTube.
Further
developments
Permaculture has developed from its Australian origins into an
international movement. English permaculture teacher Patrick Whitefield, author of The Earth Care Manual and
Permaculture in a Nutshell,
suggests that there are now two strands of permaculture: Original and Design permaculture.
Original permaculture attempts to closely replicate nature by
developing edible ecosystems which closely resemble their wild counterparts.
Design permaculture takes the working connections at use in an
ecosystem and uses them as its basis. The end result may not look as natural as a forest garden, but still respects
ecological principles. Through close observation of natural energies and flow patterns efficient design systems can
be developed. This has become known as Natural Systems
Design. (Dr. M Millington and A Sampson-Kelly)
 |
 |
John Stuart Leslie, MLA, Licensed Landscape Contractor holds a Masters in Landscape
Architecture where he studied Xeriscape, Permaculture and Natural Ecosystem Design and
Planning. |
|