Friday, August
7 , 9-10am, Sustainable World Radio
Interview
with Robyn Francis about Permaculture in
Cuba
on Sustainable
World Radio, KCSB 91.9 FM PST
also
streaming live on www.kcsb.org, interviews posted later on
www.sustainableworldradio.com
Join
Jill Cloutier of Sustainable World Radio for an interview with Robyn
Francis as she speaks about her past and future visits to Cuba
where she and other Australian permaculturists have been credited with
helping Cuba transform the islands agriculture to a more sustainable
model through perrmaculture.
Joining Jill in studio will be Wes Roe and Margie Bushman of
Santa Barbara Permaculture Network
More Info/Resources/Websites:
Climate
Change and Peak Oil are topics on the minds of many Americans
today. There is much to learn from Cuba's response to the sudden
loss of cheap and abundant oil in the early 1990's with the fall of
the Soviet Union and the continued U.S. Embargo in place since the
1960's. Cuba's industrial model of agriculture under the Soviets
was highly mechanized with monoculture crops reliant on petro-based
pesticides and fertilizers. The era in Cuba following the Soviet
collapse is known to Cubans as the "Special Period" when
it lost more than 50 percent of it oil imports, much of its food, and
85 percent of its trade economy. Transportation halted,
people went hungry, and the average Cuban lost 30 pounds.
Dictated by
reality, Cubans began to bring agriculture into the city with urban
gardens, cultivating vegetables wherever they could. A small group
of Australians assisted in this grass-roots effort, coming to Cuba in
1993 to teach Permaculture, a system based on sustainable
agriculture that uses far less energy. With a grant from the
Cuban government they set up the first Permaculture demonstration
site, that evolved into the Foundation for Nature and Humanity's Urban
Permaculture demonstration site located in Havana. Today 50
percent of Havana's vegetables come from inside the city, while in
other Cuban towns and cities, urban gardens produce from 80 percent to
more than 100 percent of what they need.
More recently
Australians have come back to Cuba to assist after two devastating
hurricanes wrought massive destruction throughout Cuba in September
2008. The loss of crops, soil and organic matter from the
torrential rains and flooding, challenged all the islands agriculture,
including the permaculture sites.
Robyn Francis and the Cuba-Australia Permaculture Exchange (CAPE)
toured the island to assess the damage, offer help, and take the
opportunity to learn from the disaster to design more resilient
systems for the future.
Robyn Francis has just
returned from a visit to Cuba in June 2009 as part of
Cuban-Australia Permaculture Exchange (CAPE) and will be reporting
on her observation in her talk on One-Earth Footprint - Learning
from Cuba's Experience. Discover the key factors enabling
Cuba to survive collapse, live within its ecological footprint, and
how this relates to Permaculture and Transition design. Don't miss
the chance to learn from one of permaculture's earliest pioneers.
Robyn
Francis is an award-winning international permaculture designer,
educator, presenter and innovator, with over 25 years of permaculture
work throughout Australia New Zealand, USA, India, Indonesia, Germany,
Cuba, and Taiwan, and including projects ranging from outback
communities to urban development. . Robyn was founding director of
Permaculture International Ltd (PIL) in 1987, editor of the
Permaculture International Journal, designer and creator of Djanbung
Gardens (www. permaculture.com.au), one of Australia's leading
permaculture centers.
<<<>>>
Upcoming Event:
Santa Barbara Permaculture Network
Permaculture Around the World Series
with Robyn Francis from Australia speaking on Permaculture in
CUBA
Saturday, Aug 8 , 6:30-8:30 pm at the
downtown Santa Barbara Public Library, 40 East Anapamu St,
Santa Barbara, CA. Donation $5, no reservations needed. For more
information visit our website at:
www.sbpermaculture.org
.
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