Permaculture Overview
A brief overview compiled by Jude Hobbs and Toby Hemenway.
definition | goals
| ethics | principles
- Design system for self-reliant living
- Respect for the essential nature of things —everything is connected
to everything else - Build harmony, through cooperation with an attitude of positivism
- An ecological science —the study of nature and natural systems
- Integration of water, people, animals, land, plants, agriculture,
technologies and community for productive and beautiful environments - Global grass roots movement applicable on all scales and situations,
worldwide
- Long term self-reliance —consider seven generations
A generation is the average time interval between
the birth of parents and the birth of their offspring
- Work with nature rather than against it
- Think globally act locally
- Plan for small scale energy efficient systems —intensive rather
than extensive - Eat a bioregional diet —bring food growing to the cities
- Hold water and fertility as high on the land as possible
- The problem is the solution —turn constraints into resources
- Reforest —restore earth fertility
- Emphasize native plants
- Increase sum of yields
- Succession, natural ecosystems change over
time giving rise to different plants and animals - Stocking, find the balance of various elements
keeping one from overpowering the other(s), number of elements
in a guild - Stacking, multilevel functions for each
element
- Succession, natural ecosystems change over
- Invent and reinvent —close the loops
- Whatever we take, we must return
One calorie in / one calorie out = sustainability
The use must pay (i.e. recycling, tree tax, seed collecting, composting,
energy) - The Earth, Gaia, is the super client
- Permaculture starts at your doorstep and is a way of life
The work of the permaculture designer is to maximize
useful energy storages in any system on which they are working,
be it house, urban property, rural lands, or gardens.
- Care for the Earth
- Care for People
- Share the Surplus
- Observation
Protracted and thoughtful observation rather than prolonged and
thoughtless action. Observe existing elements throughout all the
seasons. We design for specific sites, clients and climates. - Relative Location
Components are viewed not in isolation, but relative to the functional
relationships and timesaving connections among all parts. What
is important are the functional relationships among elements,
not the number of elements used. - Each element performs multiple functions
Each element in a system is chosen and placed so it performs as
many functions as possible. Increasing beneficial connections
between diverse components creates stability. - Each function is supported by multiple
elements
Important functions are achieved via several methods, to insure
against failure of one or more elements. - Make the least change for the greatest
effect
Find the "leverage points" in the system and intervene
there, where the least work accomplishes the most change. - Diversity
The functional connections between different elements leads to
sustainable systems, creating guilds that work together. As cooperative
species mature, abundance and stability increase. - Biological resources
Use on-site resources, such as plants and animals that reproduce
and build up over time and interact with other elements. A resource
is an energy storage that assist yields. - Energy cycling
Yields from the system supply on-site needs and/or needs of the
local region, and are reused as many times as possible. - Appropriate technology
Consider the impact: apply sustainable practices for cooking,
lighting, transport, heating, sewage treatment, water, and other
utilities. - Natural succession
Natural ecosystems develop and change over time, and the plants
and animals within them change. Plan for the long term. - Edge effect
The edge —the intersection of two environments —is the most
diverse place in a system, and where the energies and materials
accumulate. Optimize the amount of edge. - The problem is the solution
Turn constraints into resources. We are surrounded by insurmountable
opportunities. - Get a yield
Get some immediate returns from your efforts. "You can’t
work on an empty stomach." - Limits to yield
The yield of a system is theoretically unlimited, limited only
by information and imagination. - Mistakes are tools for learning
Plan to evaluate your trials —making mistakes is a sign you’re
trying to do things better.
Compiled by Jude Hobbs and Toby Hemenway