You tube of Lecture
http://www.youtube.com/user/zymurgydashjive
Keyline
Design, Sustainable Agriculture &Carbon Sequestering
Lecture With Darren Doherty in Santa Barbara Nov
07
Produced by Commongood Media and Santa Barbara Permaculture
Network
What is biological
wealth? Healthy forests, fertile soils, abundant waterways and
seas---has any great nation been built without these? As we degrade
and treat them as throw-aways can we expect a prosperous future for our
families and children? Is a sustainable system for agriculture
possible that enhances rather than depletes our natural environment?
Join Santa Barbara Permaculture Network as we explore the
concept of Keyline Design, a unique design system that
restores, regenerates landscapes, and sequesters carbon with
Darren Doherty (
www.permaculture.biz) from Australia.
Darren
Doherty is an engaging and accomplished exponent of Permaculture
and Keyline Design, Darren Doherty, principal of Australia Felix
Permaculture .He presents an overview of the design considerations and
implements of his practice. He explains how the intelligent design and
management of agricultural landscape, through its ability to rapidly
regenerate the topsoil that most effectively sequesters atmospheric
carbon, is a prime strategy in repairing humanity's relation to the
biosphere
Keyline Design is a complete design system for landscapes. It is
applicable to both rural and urban areas. It is a unique combination
of water conservation and soil building, with great appeal to both
farmers and ranchers, as it has the ability to build and regenerate
degraded soils rapidly, and sees the use of grazing animals as beneficial
to this process.
Keyline
systems were developed in Australia during the 1950’s by P.A Yeomans
(
www.yeomansplow.com.au
) as a response to increasing desertification and erosion
he observed on the Australian landscape as it related to
agriculture. His book Water For Every Farm, A Keyline
Plan is an important work describing a set of principles and
techniques based on a holistic approach that works with natural patterns
to restore and increase the depth and fertility of the soil, while
increasing its water holding capabilities. Yeomans realized
that conventional agriculture totally ignored the biological aspects of
the soil. He created a “sustainable agriculture” system before the
term was coined, and for the first time in human history, methods were
developed that could produce rich fertile soils in relatively short
periods. A permanent and lasting agriculture Yeomans believed, must
materially and financially benefit the farmer, and benefit the
land and soil.
Keyline
Design integrates terraces, ponds, tree plantings on contour, and a
special cultivation technique using the Keyline plow, to infiltrate
water into the soil efficiently and hold it on the land as long as
possible. Water harvesting strategies employed by Keyline Design
provide drought-proofing for farms with very low maintenance using
gravity fed irrigation systems, with a huge reduction in water lost
to evaporation. In contrast, up to 80% of water is lost to evaporation
using conventional overhead sprinklers. Farms using Keyline Design
have amazing records of deepening the topsoil by 3-6” in 3 years, in
contrast to nature’s process, which can take hundreds or thousands of
years.
The term
Keyline comes from the reference to a “keypoint” on the watershed,
which is the interface between collection and distribution of
water on the landscape, where ridge meets the valley.
Keyline is a philosophy and technique that doesn’t pit the needs of
farmers against environmentalists trying to protect wildlife and fish
habitat, and with carbon sequestering techniques used, helps to address
aspects of global warming and climate change.
Darren
Doherty is an Australian Keyline Designer, Developer & Manager and
Australian Approved Keyline Design™ Farm Planning Consultant, and
recipient of Whole Farm Planning Certificate ~ Train the
Trainer(University of Melbourne 1995). He has designed and
developed over 1100 properties across four continents working most
recently in Vietnam, on land projects for Mars Inc, owners of Seeds of
Change. His remaining time is spent managing a working research &
demonstration farm in Southern Victoria, Australia.
Santa Barbara Permaculture
Network
(805) 962-2571
P.O. Box 92156, Santa Barbara, CA 93190
margie@sbpermaculture.org
www.sbpermaculture.org
"We are like trees,
we must create new leaves, in new directions, in order to grow." -
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