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ccpg-admin at arashi.com
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Sun Nov 4 22:33:15 PST 2001
A Garden Ecology
Gaia’s Garden by Toby Hemenway
Chelsea Green Publishing Co, White River Junction, Vermont ( 24.95)
This is a book I would have loved to have written because so much of it
reminds me of my own experience and also brings new insight to my adventures
on the land.
This book is also one I would have loved to have researched, because the
depth of knowledge is immediately noted and the inspiration and surehanded
personal experience available in it are convincingly from a practitioner
rather than an observer. For a fellow professional gardener, this Guide to
Home-Scale Permaculture, rings very true in what its says ( the soil is what
makes the garden and the garden also makes) as well as how the book reveals
the way to structure a place of fruitful beauty that is built to last.
Toby Hemenway’s Gaia’s Garden is a gardener’s blueprint for ecological
abundance from the ground up. Or perhaps, make that from a few feet beneath
the surface of the soil, all the way to the topmost branches of the trees
planted on the garden’s far northern edge. And here we must underscore that
home and garden are very important terms here. Important because a great deal
of Permaculture literature has been devoted to large-scale land projects or
have described systems that have been created in rural , even wilderness
settings, frequently harsh, where it seems that success is somewhat of a
matter of life and death.
Instead, Hemenway describes how one can remake the four to six thousand
square feet found in your own backyard with the result that it is beautiful,
productive and self-sustaining. Hemenway’s guide is a map to get back to the
land and all you have to do is go out your back door. There you have
installed a rainwater harvesting system either for economy, water quality or
both, planted as many of your favorite edible and ornamental plants and trees
based on where the sun travels overhead and what the terrain of your land is,
and have created a personal place that physically invites you within it.
Gaia’s Garden is one that also invites creatures to share the space with
you. My favorite section contains the author’s authentic description of " a
living fertile soil….a growing earth…with industrious workers of the
soil…helpers…(that) churn and tunnel and munch and spawn, chiseling minerals
from rock and humus, all the while loosing a veritable storm of fertility to
be shared with plants." Here I see Hemenway tapping away at his keyboard with
dirt under his nails. The book is filled with much that is as genuinely
poetic as it is pragmatic.
Water is so crucial that to say so is trite. We all know about water. Without
it we’re on Mars. But water knowledge and management is an art in
Permaculture design. Water for Every Farm , by P.A. Yeomans, is listed in the
bibliography, and it was Yeomans who first laid down the Permaculture
framework for water management that was later popularized by Bill Mollison in
his books and in his many design courses. Hemenway explores the basic
water-keeper wisdom of earth design, plant canopies, natural water storage
and budgeting, and provides in his text practical applications for the
homeowner, solutions that fundamentally alter the irrigation cycle as well as
promote the use of gray-water under circumstances where it is appropriate.
The Plan is very much the main object in the practice of permaculture,
whether its for acres or square feet, and Hemenway has succeeded in taking
all the components of permaculture design and making them accessible to
anyone.
Toby Hemenway could have subtitled his book: Permaculture Gardens for Every
Home.
You will re-learn much if you already think you know it all, and if you are
just beginning there is no better place to start than with Gaia’s Garden.
reviewed by Steven Sprinkel
Ojai, CA
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