In this issue Bruce reviews the past 25 years of permaculture with joint
founder David Holmgren,
and begins with his first encounter with the man.
by Bruce Hedge
Newham, Victoria.
http://www.earthgarden.com.au/stories.html
I first met David Holmgren at the Bredbo “Down To Earth” Confest in late
1977. It was the early, heady, exciting days of permaculture. Bill
Mollison’s irrepressible charisma and enthusiasm had drawn us to this
stark delinquent landscape on the Murrumbidgee River just south of
Canberra. We’d all come to hear the great man entertain us and tell us
tall tales and true about this new and wonderful way of self sufficiency
in uncertain times. Bill was the consummate storyteller and we were all
enthralled in his presence. During a break in the frenzied proceedings, I
asked Bill a question about something (I can’t remember what . . .) and
he said to me “oh ... you’d better ask David Holmgren about that …”
gesturing to a young, shy man nearby. Over the following 27 years I’ve
learned of that young man’s wisdom, determination, and willingness to
walk the walk and talk the talk in his pursuit of a lifestyle which
leaves a very light footprint indeed on this fragile planet.
I chatted recently to David at “Melliodora”, his model permaculture site
in Hepburn, Central Victoria. I asked him whether he had any idea in 1977
about the direction that their permaculture concept would take. “I saw
the permaculture concept but I didn’t envisage the movement itself”, he
said.
David’s attitude has shifted over the decades from ambivalence to
acceptance of one of the most progressive forces for positive change
happening in the world today, effectively connecting everything we need
to change all at once rather than just one piece. “We have to change
every aspect of the way we use natural resources and the way we live.
Initially I felt uneasy about being a role model because people may copy
things which are inappropriate to their own situations they might take
things out of context everything is always more complex … but now I
tend to accept those things as part of the process.”
“Some of the people who now provide permaculture services have visited us
here at Melliodora”, David continued.
“They’ve seen that it’s important to experiment on yourself first. If
you’re proposing that people live differently, then the first test is
‘can you do it yourself’? This is a funny sort of challenge because some
of the aspects of the permaculture lifestyle initially swim against the
tide. For instance, the idea of growing your own food. Food’s the
cheapest it’s been in human history relative to wages. When someone has
skills that are in demand and are highly paid, it sometimes doesn’t make
sense to spend a lot of time and effort to learn to grow a lot of your
own food. But there are many other reasons to grow food. If we move to a
changed economic and environmental situation, food will not be cheap.
Then we have to ask ‘how do we skill up society?’ We need a lot of
working models in different situations and you can’t just switch those
models on overnight.”
David’s partner Su Dennett is committed to the same values, but brings
different skills to the partnership. David says she has challenged him to
be even more radical in his behaviour. For example, living simply with
what’s in the cupboard or garden, or her passion about the family
changing over to the outside compost toilet. In fact, David, Su and
Oliver have actually closed down their conventional flush toilet inside
the house. Part of this comes from Su being the “animal person”, whereas
David is the “plant person”. Su sees the value of animal and human
compost and the stupidity of flushing good nutrients away with water. She
has a close relationship with her animals, going out every morning to
milk the goats.
“In any self-reliant household, unless it’s five to ten people, there are
never enough skills to do everything efficiently,” says David.
“We always come up against economies of scale. Is it worth baking your
own bread or milking an animal? Sometimes I have to ask other people to
do work I really love doing. Work such as building a shed, because I have
to sit at a desk running my consultancy. Even though we grow our own
firewood but don’t use much in our energy-efficient house, cutting it
looms as an ever bigger task each year, especially as we get older. I’m
now finding the culture change from my previous substantial self-reliance
to a delegating role for some tasks to be very interesting. We’re all a
bit pigheaded about how we want particular things done and we have to
learn to let go a little.”
I asked David who had influenced him most over the years and he said he’d
love to have met Howard Odum, PA Yeomans and EF Schumacher. David was
actually taught at Hobart’s College of Advanced Education by one of
Schumacher’s closest colleagues, George McRobie, while he was forming his
early ideas of permaculture.
David has recently embraced modern technology to update his 1995 book on
Melliodora into an e-book available on one CD. All the original black and
white photos are now in colour and David’s son Oliver has created many
virtual tours of this remarkable property. Log on to
www.holmgren.com.au
for more information. Despite the e-book, he remains slightly sceptical about computers in the very long term of our energy descent. “If your seed bank can’t be accessed without your computer then that’s a serious problem.”
Apart from Bill Mollison and David Holmgren, many people were responsible for promoting permaculture in the early days. One person in particular made a huge contribution. Terry White from Maryborough,Victoria produced the “Permaculture Quarterly Journal” for ten years. Hundreds of articles inspired us all. Terry then turned his considerable expertise to areas like salinity control and energy efficiency. David and Terry have known each other for 25 years. Recently they were chatting and found out that they were born 10 years apart. Exactly. To the day.
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David Holmgren West Coast Workshops and Talks USA Aug/Sept 2005
DAVID HOLMGREN Co-orginator of Permaculture only Talk/Workshop in Southern California
PERMACULTURE IN THE 21 ST CENTURY LECTURE WITH DAVID HOLMGREN ,SANTA BARBARA CA
Tues Aug 2 2005 7PM $15
Santa Barbara City College East Campus
Tues Aug 2 ALL DAY WORKSHOP AT SB City College East Campus 721 Cliff Drive Santa Barbara Campus Center
Morning 9-1 PM DAVID HOLMGREN “PERMACULTURE SOLUTIONS AROUND THE WORLD
Afternoon Session 2-5PM
WITH
Bill Roley Workshop: Watersheds a Permaculture Perspective ,
Larry Santoyo Workshop:Urban Permaculture
Doug Richardson (Director Environmental Horticulture) Workshop: Restorations Project and the SB Hort. Garden
Special Guest Don Sarich CEO Permaculture Credit Union and Scott Pittman Permaculture Designer/Teacher New Mexico
COST $80 (STUDENTS $60 )
To Register send check to Santa Barbara Permaculture Network 312 E Sola St #1 Santa Barbara Ca 93101
For more info sbpcnet@silcom.com 805-962-2571 www.sbpermaculture.org
COSPONSOR/FUNDRAISER fo Santa Barbara Permaculture Network ,Permaculture Credit Union (www.pcuonline.org), SBCC Environmental Horticulture Dept. and SBCC Student Sustainability Coalition (www.biosbcc.net)
David Holmgren , co-originator with Bill Mollison of the Permaculture concept, is an innovative environmental design consultant based in Hepburn Springs in Central Victoria ,Australia. where he maintains one of Australia's best-known permaculture sites. His latest book , Permaculture Principles& Pathways Beyond Sustainability is a distillation of life lived by the principles of Permaculture. To see his writings and designs visited www.holmgren.com.au
August 6 - 9, 2005 4-Day Workshop with David Holmgren Petaluma, California
Institute of Noetic Sciences (IONS), Petaluma, California.
Cost $450 not including lunch,
Double occupancy dorm style accommodation $300 per person for three nights includes 3 delicious organic meals.
Single occupancy is $360 for three nights includes 3 delicious organic meals.
Download the registration form (PDF file) and return it with a check made payable to Permaculture Institute to:
Permaculture Institute of Northern California, P.O. Box 341, Point Reyes Station, CA 94956
Contact: 415·663·9090 voicemail or info@permacultureinstitute.com www.permacultureinstitute.com/
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David Holmgren in Portland Oregon
Aug 13 -17 Sat-Wed FIVE DAY PERMACULTURE WORKSHOP with Toby Hemenway and David Holmgren $295
August 16 -17, Tues- Wed Advanced Workshop on Permaculture Ethics and Principles with David Holmgren.$140
Three day introductory workshop August 13-15 with Toby Hemenway is $180.
TO REGISTER, Permaculture Solutions, LLC3527 NE 15th, PMB # 101Portland, OR 97212
August 15, 7:00 p.m. Mon David Holmgren Talk at Pacific Crest Community School, NE 29th and Davis $10.
Contact info@portlandpermaculture.com, 503.293.8004
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David Holmgren in Washington State
Aug 19-21 Bellingham WA Northwest Herbal Faire
Aug 23 Olympia WA , Permaculture Solutions for the World
Aug 27-28 Two Day Workshop at TwisP, $130 both days , $70 one day
27 Permaculture Principles 28 Ecosystem Restoration
Aug 30-Sept 1, 3 day Advanced Course Permaculture Design Theory and Principles Seattle $175
Contact Washington/ Oregon Friends of the Trees friendsofthetrees@yahoo.com www.friendsoftrees.net 360-927-1274