Permaculture is about working with nature to make a better world for us
all. By studying patterns in the natural world, we can derive for
ourselves, a set of guiding principles. Permaculture design uses these
principles to develop integrated systems to provide for our needs of
food, shelter, energy and community in ways that are healthy, efficient
and sustainable. Using Permaculture design we can improve the quality
and productivity of our individual lives, our society and our
environment.
Permaculture also has an ethical basis:
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Earth care - enabling all life systems to continue & increase.
-
People care - enabling access to the resources people need for a good quality of life.
-
Fair share - voluntary limits to population and consumption;
to share resources for Earth care & People care.
Permaculture is a way of designing systems, to maximise yields using
the least effort. While it can be creatively used to design almost
anything that we do, it is at present most commonly applied to food
production. Our current farming systems are very energy-intensive,
either through the use of heavy machinery, fossil fuels, chemicals or
manual labour. Not only are these unsustainable in energy terms, but
they are also rapidly degrading our soils and in turn the nutritional
value of the food that we grow in them. While natural systems cycle
back nearly one hundred important elements into the soil, NPK
fertilisers put back three! The end result of such practices is plain
to foresee. We need to re-evaluate the way we grow our food urgently!
While the current trend back towards organic farming and gardening is a
step in the right direction, any system of mono-culture (planting large
areas with a single crop) will always be a struggle against nature's
unstoppable tendency towards bio-diversity.
Thus 'organic' in itself is
still not the answer. We need truly sustainable systems and
Permaculture can design them for us.
So when we design food growing systems, we ask ourselves "How would nature do this? What kind of wild flora and fauna live here, and what adaptations have they made to become successful?"
As I'm sure you've noticed, large areas of a single species are not
commonly found in nature and while a mono-cultured grain field may look
full, it occupies only one level in terms of height and depth.
Observing nature has shown us that there may be seven or more distinct
vertical layers of plants and trees in any stable ecosystem, with a
variety of rooting depths drawing up nutrients from all levels within
the soil. This process is ultimately beneficial to all species growing
and living there, as all these nutrients are eventually recycled back
into the topsoil. Diverse systems do not suffer 'crop failures' (which
can of course be disastrous with single crops, leading to mass famine
at times). Their more stable microclimates ensure that there are always
some species that are doing especially well at any given time.
Fungi perform many important roles within nature, some decomposing dead
matter to make new raw materials and others growing in cooperative
relationships with plants, trees and insects. Insects also have many
cooperative relationships with plants; for instance by exchanging
pollination service for food. Cooperation abounds in nature and is what
holds natural systems together. Even where one animal predates upon
another, the prey are reliant upon the predator to control their
numbers and ensure that the fittest genes get passed on to the next
generation.
Animals are of course vital to any healthy
eco-system, but in the wild they are always on the move. Grazing
animals, regularly tracked by predators, travel in large groups for
safety, and this pattern allows grassland time to recover in between
grazing. If we are to include large herbivores in a system, we need to
keep moving them around, or the sward (mat of roots) that protects the
soil gets broken up. Soil compaction or erosion soon follows and once
this has occurred, a lot of energy is required to rebuild the structure
of the soil.
Permaculture systems have already been designed and applied
successfully in all the different types of climate around the World, in
many cases restoring productivity to land previously made barren by
mono-culture systems and allowing people to feed themselves again
(see the 'Greening the Desert ' short movie for a fine example!).
For most of us, bringing some Permaculture design
into our own gardens is a first but very important step that we can all
make. At home we can create a low-maintenance, attractive environment
that can also provide us with a significant quantity of fresh,
nutritious food. All we need is the know-how, plus better access to a
few plants and trees that aren't yet easily available. Permaculture is
something that we can all learn relatively easily; a lot of it is just
common sense that we hadn't thought of before! It provides us with the
tools to help us make the right choices for our particular situation
and then connect those things together in the most beneficial way.
Once we understand the basics, everything else
builds upon those principles and we become part of the worldwide group
of people learning by simply living it. Whilst Permaculture is
relatively new (about thirty years), it is modelled on a system that is
as old and successful as life itself. Permaculture is a rapidly growing
science, with more and more being learned all the time to fine-tune the
design process. Permaculture works, as established designs clearly
demonstrate, but then this is hardly a surprise as nature has plenty of
time to get it right!
This can only be a quick introduction; a much more in-depth description
of what Permaculture is about can be found in the many books that have
now been written on the subject. There is also more to be found on the
World Wide Web; check out the links page for a few examples. There is
another good introduction on the About Permaculture pages of the Permaculture Association (Britain)'s website.
The Association's website is currently the premier resource for all
things sustainable, providing links to just about anything you can
think of.... and if it doesn't, please let them know!