[Ccpg] What is Permaculture? Why is it nicknamed the quiet, peaceful rebellion? Ryan Rudolph
Wesley Roe and Marjorie Lakin Erickson
lakinroe at silcom.com
Mon Aug 7 19:01:13 PDT 2006
Ryan Rudolph
July 7, 2005
http://www.californiachronicle.com/articles/viewArticle.asp?articleID=1019
"We need to get these competent gardeners of the Third World to rich
countries to teach people how to grow food." Bill Mollsion 1989
What is Permaculture? Why is it nicknamed the quiet, peaceful rebellion? To
quote David Holmgren, Permaculture is a design system for sustainable
living and land use. The ethics of Permaculture are fairly simple: 1. Care
of the Earth: Provision for all life systems to continue and multiply, 2.
Care of People: Provision for people to access the resources necessary for
their existence 3. Share our Resources: By governing our own needs, we can
set resources aside to further our ethics
Now how Is America, and the rest of the western developed world breaking
these ethical principles?
I think we need to first begin with the western attitude towards
agriculture. Many industrial Commercial farmers see nature as a crude
imbalanced force, that is in desperate need of conquering by the technology
of man, and the other school of thought is that of a Permaculture farmer
who can clearly see that Nature grows her own plants with no or little help
of man, she is intelligent, and when man interferes with his technology, he
only makes it seem that nature is imperfect because he doesn't understand
the consequences of his own meddling.
So the wisdom of Permaculture is rooted in techniques that we are not
doing, however there are also simple rules of things that we need to be
doing in our gardens.
I will briefly go into both:
No tilling of the soil: The misconception of modern day industrial farmers
is that the soil needs to be tilled in order to grow crops, this is dead
wrong, it could not be further from the truth. Earthworms, microorganisms,
moles, and other insects are constantly working the soil through natural
processes. How does tilling the soil make it weaker? When you till the soil
it actually exposes it to a constant bombardment from the sun, rain and
wind which causes severe leeching, erosion and ultimately soil destruction.
This is why when you observe soil in a natural setting; it is always
covered by plant cover (weeds). So weeds are not a negative thing! They
protect the soil from erosion; this is a new school of thought.
But weeds do need to be controlled to a certain extent, and the answer is
mulching. Mulching has many useful functions in the garden. It protects
soil, and when it decomposes back into the earth, nutrients are restored,
and it controls weeds. So there are three important functions that this one
simple technique provides. When we are mulching, tilling is a silly thing
to do, tilling is much more destructive, while mulching is regenerative,
and wise.
What is a good mulch to use: grasses, weeds, hay, straw, partially
decomposed compost.
Another technique to avoid: No chemical fertilizers. Petroleum products
rule the world; this is a shame because they are not a sustainable, clean
form of energy. The problem with chemical fertilizers is that they disrupt
and interfere with the natural processes that need to happen within the
soil in order to keep it fertile and healthy. Chemical fertilizers destroy
bacteria, microorganisms, microbes, and other insects and small creatures
that are vitally necessary to the soil's fragile balance.
In America, more desertification has happened in the late fifty years then
in any area of the world, it is a similar tragedy as what has taken place
in Africa. The government keeps calling for more soil scientists, but they
do not have the power and are not willing to challenge the current system
because the entire economic system is dependent of the selling of machinery
(for tilling) and chemical fertilizers to farmers. Again, we have people in
power that are not fully educated, that are selling products/services that
humanity does not need, and in actuality are causing more harm than good.
Another problem with Industrial farming is that you have a small percentage
of farmers trying to grow food for the masses; this is not how farming is
supposed to happen. Everyone needs to be growing a portion of his or her
own food. Growing one crop in one large area is an ignorant/dumb thing to
do. Nature needs a diversity of many different species of plants to occupy
an area in order to keep the soil healthy and fertile, this is another
reason why soil destruction is at an all time high, not enough diversity in
the farmer's field, and if you are trying to grow large cash crops which is
the template of industrial design, the principle of diversity is thrown out
the window.
This is why small vegetable gardens are much more sustainable, eco-friendly
than any industrial operation.
Diversity is the key in implementing a Permaculture design on your own
property. I have berry plants, fruit trees, vegetables, and soon grains
will be added. This makes so much more sense when considering the
possibility of crop death. If you are growing a large diversity of crops,
and one is whipped out from disease, insects, etc, it is not a big problem
because you didn't put all your eggs in one basket if I can bother that
expression.
Another key factor in Permaculture design is nothing is wasted, for example
organic leftovers from your meal are put into a compost and the compost is
used to treat the soil, and when I say treat the soil all you are doing is
dumping the compost on top of the soil and letting nature do the rest, very
simple. Farming is actually very little work if you are doing it correctly;
there is no reason for tilling, using a hoe, weeding and all that nonsense.
Also it is important to have water barrels to collect rainwater, which can
be used for irrigation.
Permaculture is basically the design system for the garden of Eden, in
which humanity will have to work very little, it is the promised land in
the bible where man will not have to work and toil endlessly eight hours a
day. Permaculture is the future, and we can see evidence of his growing
emergence and popularity as energy becomes harder to extract from the
earth, we can see how desperate the governments have become in order to
have control over the energy reserves in the world. Just look at the war in
Iraq, it is quite pathetic that we can stoop this low.
But there are intelligent human beings who are working together to
transform this planet into a diverse haven of edible foods; it is really
the most exciting time to be alive. Even though we are surrounded by war,
violence, chaos, and havoc, great order can emerge as humans are pushed
towards their creative potential.
Comments: Ryan575 at hotmail.com
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