Making barren
lands bountiful
http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/asiapcf/10/07/going.green.lawton.permaculture/
* STORY
HIGHLIGHTS
* Geoff
Lawton is using renewable natural resources to enrich ecosystems
*
Permaculture can turn the most arid, nutrient-free soil into
thriving habitats
*
Lawton's friend and mentor, Bill Mollison developed the
technique in the 1970s
*
Lawton has turned deserts in Jordan and Morocco into rich
oases
updated 12:51
p.m. EDT, Wed October 7, 2009
(CNN) -- It is midday and Geoff Lawton is hard
at work at Zaytuna Farms in New South Wales, Australia. But the real
work, he says, is going on inside the center of the
compost.
Geoff Lawton says
that permaculture "revs up" systems of soil
creation.
"There's lots of things breeding in there," Lawton says.
Compost may not seem a sexy subject, but within this steaming pile,
life is being created.
"There's organisms breathing and dying and reproducing very
quickly," he says. "It's all very hot and steamy."
That rich soil lays the groundwork for Lawton's revolutionary method
of food production. It's called permaculture.
Lawton's friend and mentor, Bill Mollison, developed the process back
in the 1970s. Since then he and Lawton have traveled the globe
preaching the value of permaculture and its aim to create harmony
between the landscape and the people who live on it.
"Nature exists in an incredibly rich form, and enriching form and
does so without any energy inputs from mankind," Lawton explains.
"Permaculture does the same thing."
"We've taken the systems of soil creation and soil life and we've
revved them up. We've speeded up nature itself and we've improved the
system." Watch Geoff Lawton at work »
So what does it take to improve the system?
Lawton says it's about rehabilitating areas that have been damaged by
pollution or overuse by recycling nutrients and energy back into the
soils.
Fact Box
Permaculture
(permanent agriculture) is the conscious design and maintenance of
agriculturally productive ecosystems which have the diversity,
stability, and resilience of natural ecosystems. It is the harmonious
integration of landscape and people providing their food, energy,
shelter, and other material and non-material needs in a sustainable
way.
Source:
Permaculture Research Institute of Australia
Permaculture also takes all
the things we need -- our housing, energy sources, food and water
supplies -- and tailors them to fit into the natural rhythms of the
ecosystem. The idea is to work with, not against, nature.
Lawton says that during the first few weeks and months you don't see
the real benefits, but after a year to 18 months you really start to
see the difference.
"Within two or three years you can see a system that is really
something that's got great opportunities and possibilities," he
said.
The gardens at Zaytuna Farms bear fruit and vegetables of all that
hard work. The real measure though isn't how it works, but where.
Lawton claims this permaculture method can work anywhere in the world,
including the desert.
"Almost all the deserts on earth at one point were forested,"
he said. "They all have different types of oasis systems. What
you're doing is picking different points in the desert and turning
them into a rich oasis."
On a DVD created by the
Permaculture Research Institute of Australia, Lawton shows us what happened when he took this
method to places like Morocco and Jordan -- just 80 kilometers from
the Dead Sea.
"People were amazed to
see an area that was salty, sandy ground, turn into a lush green
forest, that had mushrooms growing from the soil," Lawton
said.
The ability to "green"
the desert is not only having an impact on the communities where these
gardens are grown. Interest is also sprouting among young people.
Dozens come to Zaytuna Farms every year to learn about the
permaculture method.
"I've only been doing it a year and once you hit upon the
principles it's basically observations," said intern Jonathan
Chan.
"You have to look at the
land and which way the wind is blowing and see where the sun angles
are and design around that and it does seem quite simple."
For Chan it's as much about cultivating a new way of life as it is
about cultivating the land.
"I think people are getting to the point where they have to make
change and permaculture is a good direction to go," he said.
Still, permaculture isn't without its critics. They argue the method
is time-consuming in the early stages and that makes the system hard
to get off the ground in many places.
It can be made even more difficult if the people living around the
site aren't familiar with the process.
But Lawton argues the time and energy expended in a permaculture
garden is offset by the quality of the experience, and the richness of
the end result.
"A good organic farmer works a thousand hours a year. The
industrial mankind works two thousand to three thousand hours a year.
What do we have to show for it? Gadgets.
"We don't have community, we don't have clean water, clean air or
sensible housing. As negative as we currently are, we can be equally
positive," Lawton said. "It's not just self-reliance or
self-sufficiency, it's absolute abundance." E-mail to a
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