hi everyone
here is an
article that Dave White wrote for Hopedance Issue Permaculture "A
Quiet Revolution" Nov/Dec 2001
www.hopedance.org
And follow up message Dave sent about a grant he got to aid his
Permaculture Work at Happy Valley School in Ojai Ca
wes
Great news!
The Happy Valley Foundation has been awarded a $6,000 grant for
environmental projects by the Star Fund of the Tides Foundation, on the
recommendation of Angela and Anthony Ocone. These funds will provide
support for the school's Permaculture program and help its outreach to
other educational centers through July 2002.
Permaculture at Happy Valley continues to thrive!
David R White PhD
Environmental Coordinator
Happy Valley School
PO Box 850
Ojai, CA 93024
(805) 646 4343
http:www.hvalley.org
Permaculture and Education. David R White PhD.
October 10th, 2001
Teaching
our children about the environment can become a listing of dire
scenarios. Global warming, ozone depletion, pollution, topsoil loss,
diversity loss and overpopulation provide a daunting curriculum.
Permaculture design is an all encompassing, positive approach to the
environment that students can easily understand and relate to. I
have spent the last 5 years teaching a Permaculture curriculum for high
school students at the Happy Valley School in the Upper Ojai Valley,
Ventura County. This curriculum is land based, hands-on and does
not stop at the school's gates; rather it reaches into the local
community through adult education on the land, seminars and slide
shows. In the essay I will detail some of the teaching strategies I
use.
One of my
first lesson plans of the year for my environmental science class is a
visit to an undisturbed native climax community, in our case a hillside
of coast live oaks. These provide a wealth of information to the
observant. Perhaps most importantly they providing the student with
a clear understanding of natural soil production. Building soils by
mimicking natural soil production through mulching provides a key
hands-on component of this class throughout the year.
Another
early lesson is to achieve an overview of the campus, from
surrounding vantage points and maps, to distinguish on-site from off-site
resources. The clear connection between fossil-fueled
transportation for off-site resources, with all its attendant,
multi-faceted problems, can be made at this point . Emphasizing and
utilizing on-site resources is a key theme of this Permaculture
class. Students design and build methods for using the on-site
resources of sun, rain and food. Making A-frame levels and cutting
swales or ditches on contour can be a fun and effective lesson theme,
although extensive earth moving has to be coordinated with other land
management interests, most importantly weed abatement in our semi-rural
location. No point in building swales which are disced over in the
spring. An important aspect of Permaculture education is the
coordination of land management. Teaching our grounds crew to disc
and mow on contour, and by providing low growing drought tolerant ground
cover for them to mow helps increase rain water percolation and reduce
erosion at our site.
Producing
food on site is an aspect of Permaculture design that many schools have
embraced at least symbolically. Strawberries along a pathway make a
walk a treat. However, initial enthusiasm for garden construction
can dwindle, especially if the garden is built far from paths well
traveled. Small gardens would probably do best to focus on flower
production with occasional food plants intermingled. Bunches of
flowers on the administrators desk are a sure way to garner
support. Perennial plantings are emphasized. The reality of
producing the daily food needs for a school is overwhelming for
most, although successful programs exist at Midland, Pacific High, Oak
Grove and Happy Valley schools. We have been most successful by
leasing land adjacent to the school to an organic farmer. This
interface has proven to be a fertile edge at Happy Valley, with students
gaining from the farmer's input and vice versa.
Tree
planting has long been recognized as a celebratory marking of our lives
on earth. Planting and caring for trees is a central focus of
Happy Valley's Permaculture program. This private high school now
has approximately 100 diverse fruit trees planted by students
around its campus. This focus on perennial food production requires
that appropriate trees are chosen and planted in places where they will
thrive. This includes choosing trees that fruit during the school
year. We have had success with apples, pears, nectarines,
mulberries, walnuts, Asian persimmons and citrus. Our avocados are
an experiment in micro-climates, planted on our south facing, frost
draining hillsides. Burgeoning crops of apricots in August have little
teaching impact on students during summer vacation, although the presence
of a commercial kitchen could allow for value to be added to this food
production through canning, drying or otherwise preserving.
Composting
is another hands on tool integrated into the Happy Valley Permaculture
curriculum. It mimics the natural pattern of turning waste into
food. For the science teacher, the compost pile provides many
lesson plans, such as classification of soil biota. Composting
completes the cycle between the kitchen and the land. Straw bales
provide an easily maneuverable carbon source to balance the high nitrogen
waste. Composting clean kitchen scraps is less messy than
processing slops, although this could be done with appropriate space and
management, perhaps in the form of a worm composting facility. As
landfill space continues to become more expensive, the dumping of slops
into trash should become a thing of the past and we should see more
support for innovative green waste composting. An overview of green
waste disposal becomes the purview of a Permaculture coordinator.
The grounds crew cut brush and mow, but what happens to the
trimmings. Are they trashed or burned?.!
We have moved toward processing brush on site by arranging it in
wind-rows and having a neighboring farmer come over and flail it for
us. This mulches some of our orchards and provides the carbon input
for large scale composting, if the equipment (a front loader) and trained
personnel are available.
Most
schools will have only limited funds available to support a Permaculture
program. To ensure that students are taught a proactive approach to
the environment, it is vital that all schools provide support for
an effective environmental coordinator. Realistically, a successful
Permaculture program will require some creative funding. Small
grants are available for garden programs and other innovative teaching
methods. The Hansen trust in Ventura County funds school
gardens. Amgen provides educational mini grants. Check with your
county library for grant information. The Ventura County Community
Foundation in Camarillo and the Santa Barbara City Library have the
Foundation Directory for searching for grant information. Donations
can be solicited from appropriate parties. Be bold about asking for
funding, this is important work. Internship funding for key roles,
such as composting or harvesting from the garden for the kitchen can
encourage students to become more di!
rectly involved. Happy Valley School has links to the
Evergreen College in Washington and Oberlin College in Ohio, who send
students to teach and learn. This is particularly useful in
January, when we prune our trees to prevent disease and damage from fruit
overload.
A
hands-on procedure which is both soil building and mulching and uses
on-site resources is the planting of soil builder mix. Growing
nitrogen fixing legumes such as peas, beans and vetch and carbon fixing
cereals such as oats, barley or triticale creates fertile soil, diverse
habitat and provides mulch which students can cut with hand sickles and
pile around their trees. Mulch is grown where it is needed,
producing fertility locally. We also sow seeds of insectary plants
such as calendula, and in a lesson on vegetative propagation we
transplant mints, such as lemon balm, rosemary, lavender, spearmint and
peppermint, which attract beneficial insects and act as ground cover.
Students are responsible for creating mini- gardens around each
tree. On hillsides they sculpt and terrace the landscape around the
tree to maximize water percolation. Plans are based on staking out
contours using bunyip, A-frame or builders bubble levels. Disturbed soil
is seeded for soil building and beneficial insect habitat, with emphasis
on cuttings and seed collection from surrounding plantings.
Earthworks are mulched where possible with cardboard, straw, wood chips
and compost to augment the soil. Moving wheelbarrows full of mulch
is a good workout for all students. Plantings are amended with
mycorhizzae and the micro nutrients and minerals found in river sand,
bone and blood meal. Students fertilize their trees with feather meal
which is 14% protein. Commercial growers aim for one pound of
nitrogen per tree per year.
A basic
principle of Permaculture Design is that of multiple functions from a
single element. Using this template experiments on seed germination
can use food plants, such as tomatoes, which can then be planted out in
the garden. Companion planting and plant guild creation can also be
experimented with. Fast growing trees can be planted with vines,
ground cover and root crops around them. The shrub layer can
include the beautiful native ceanothus which is a nitrogen fixer.
Plant guilds can also be setup in large containers. Students learn about
the seven layers of forestry and try to fill as many niches as
possible. Ground covers of strawberry and mint with vines like
kiwi, passion fruit or grape can be planted with a variety of different
trees. Use caution planting fast growing grapes; these will smother
semi-dwarf fruit trees unless intensively managed on an annual
basis.
Happy
Valley School also has a circular fifty-five foot diameter fenced garden
which is currently laid out with 16 keyhole beds in a mandala
pattern. Each student in the biology class has a bed for
experiments. This years theme is carbon fixation. Students
participate in planting and harvesting in the neighboring organic farm,
and their Permaculture curriculum also includes native regeneration in
both upland and riparian areas. Student progress is monitored
through their journals in which they keep a record of all that goes
on in the class; their homework is their journal. In the field we
witness a wide array of natural phenomena. Snakes, all manner of
insects, tarantulas, toads, vultures, deer, swallows or frogs have been
encountered. Students are encouraged to research these natural
surprises and present their findings to the class for extra-credit.
Many create beautiful journals filled with their own illustrations and
photographs. I use "Introduction to Permaculture" as a
text. I give a practical exam based on plant identification which
requires that students know the roles of various plants in the
environment (pioneer, invasive, insectary, nitrogen fixer, edible, etc.),
and they answer essay questions on Permaculture design in a final
exam.
By
teaching Permaculture design we are sharing a vision of ecotopia.
This template can be recreated effectively at any number of different
centers of education. New synergies of information are being forged
daily. Educational supervisors need to hear more requests for
proactive environmental education such as is provided by a Permaculture
curriculum. Permaculture constitutes a paradigm
shift. It truly represents a positive approach to our
future.
David Robert White PhD is a Permaculture Design Course
Graduate in 1997 , the Environmental Coordinator at Happy Valley School
in charge of Permaculture Education and maintenance of the site ,have
asked him for more bio
artdetour@mac.com
PO Box 973, Ojai, CA 93024
(805) 646 9809
http://artdetour.com