Friday 27 September 2013

Permaculture - not Hippy nonsense

PERMACULTURE








Growing some of your own veggies, composting your food scraps, redirecting that air-conditioning drip onto the fruit tree on the patio… it’s the little things we decide to do that can lead us toward a more sustainable existence. In Permaculture, these small gestures are sometimes called examples of the ‘one percent rule’ which can, when we do enough of them, add up to significant benefits in our immediate environment – and a happier, healthier and decidedly more interesting life.
Permaculture is described as a deliberate design of ecosystems that offer diversity, stability & resilience, a philosophy of working with, rather than against, nature. The beginnings of this study started some 40 years ago, & was dismissed as 'hippy nonsense" at first. The concept of Permaculture, today, is based on 3 profound core ethics:-
  • caring for earth
  • caring for people
  • fair sharing of the earth's bounty & resources
Unfortunately, as most of us only connect to food when we drop into the supermarket to buy our groceries, not seeing it as something that comes from the earth, we have disconnected ourselves from the process. Permaculture has 12 simple principles, which to most of us would be seen as common sense, ie; - integrate rather than segregate; work with nature, not against it; create no waste .


What Is Permaculture?


Permaculture is a system of design principles for building and cultivating sustainable human habitats, drawing inspiration from patterns in natural systems. And in this case, ‘habitats’ means whatever you call home – apartment, farm, terrace, suburb or even houseboat. A functioning Permaculture system is a habitat that takes into consideration as many of its inputs and outputs as it possibly can, and aims to become as efficient and sustainable as possible for the sake and comfort of its inhabitants. This includes growing food wherever you live (window-sill tomatoes), finding creative and useful ways to reuse waste (emptying out the bath water), thinking carefully about how to make things do more than one job (left in the sun for the afternoon, the back seat of your car is a brilliant spot to rise bread dough or make yoghurt in a flash) and basically working with what you’ve got (Balcony seems too small for a mini veggie plot? Go vertical and harvest climbing beans, peas and passionfruit from the balcony walls and barrier instead).


Want To Learn More?

There are quite a few courses & workshops around Australia. Topics can include building up the soil, what to plant in a small urban garden & how to mulch & water successfully. Pest & disease control is discussed, also weed control, companion planting, harvesting & storage.
All courses are based on permaculture principles, such as catching & storing energy, produce no waste (composting, recycling) & integrate rather than separate (companion planting, crop rotation)

  • Permaculture College Australia (Nimbin)
  • Milkwood Permaculture (Mudgee)
  • Permaculture Sydney Institute (Sydney)
  • Southern Cross Permaculture Institute (Gippsland)




How To Include Permaculture Principles


Catch and store energy: Energy means things like water, heat, a cooling breeze – anything that passes into your system that you need, try to find a way to catch and store it within your system for your future use. Collect rain run-off in a tank (or a bucket) to catch and store water, paint a sunny north-facing brick wall a dark color to catch winter heat, create the ultimate airflow path to direct and divert that cooling breeze throughout your whole house.
Integrate rather than segregate: Aim for multi-tasking in all aspects of your habitat, and try to make sure that everything serves more than one function. This can apply to objects, structures, plants and any other element of your system. For example, remember that north-facing brick wall? As well as painting it a dark color to catch and store heat energy in winter, you could plant a passionfruit vine to trail up it. The northern aspect will help ripen the fruit, the leaves will shield the wall from collecting heat energy in summer, and, being deciduous, the passionfruit will lose its leaves over winter when you want that wall to be catching all the sun it can. That wall is now multi-tasking  and providing you with both passionfruit and a more comfortable environment throughout the year.
Use and value diversity: Permaculture is big on diversity. Diversity, frankly, is what any stable system hinges apon. An enduring example of diversity being used to stabilize and enhance a system is the French cottage garden, known as the Potager. A Potager garden is a part ornamental, part kitchen garden, where cabbages grow under roses and beans grow amongst oregano with poppies towering overhead. The diversity of plants in a Potager, which is frequently without rows of any single particular vegetable, creates an admirably stable system through diversity, where pests are often confused by the riot of shapes and colors, and therefore cannot wreak havoc on more than one of your cabbages before they get picked off by either birds, ‘good bugs’, or you.
Creatively use and respond to change:  Whether it’s taking out the front lawn and putting in water-wise, bird attracting plants and groundcovers in response to water restrictions, voluntarily down-sizing (which incidentally gives you more time to make your habitat more sustainable), or just opting out of the culture or More in favor of an outlook of Enough, change is the main constant of any system. 
Use small and slow solutions:  Those seemingly 'big projects' getting you down?Permaculture advocates a simple solution to this problem: start at your back  door, and work outwards from there.  You could roll up your sleeves and begin with nurturing just one pot of herbs on your windowsill, and take the adventure from there. Who knows what, in a few years time, you might have created beyond that window.



3 Tips For Planting Yummy Crops

  • Plant the most highly productive & prized plants, something you love to eat. Picking different greens continuously for 8 weeks is more exciting than watching 2 capsicums plants grow all season.
  • Grow a variety of heirloom & native plant seeds
  • Top planting recommendations for a beginner include :- tomatoes, peas, strawberries & carrots, greens such as lettuce, silverbeet, spinach, kale & rocket, flavoursome herbs such as chives, basil , parsley, oregano, mint, rosemary & thyme. Companion plant marigolds, calendula & nasturtiums.
















Friends Together

The principles of Companion planting is as old as gardening itself. It means planting certain plants together for better yield & flavour. Basically, by planting a variety of plants together, confuses the insects that seek out that particular plant. 
  • beans are happy near celery & cucumbers, but dislike onions & fennel.
  • beetroot like being near lettuce, onions & most cabbages, but dont like pole beans & mustard
  • carrots, lettuce, radish, onions & tomatoes like each other but dont like dill anywhere near them.
  • corn likes pumpkins, peas, beans, cucumbers & potatoes, but not tomatoes
  • lettuce likes onions, strawberries, carrots, radishes & cucumbers.


Good Gardening Habits

Gardening, with its bending, stretching, lifting etc is great exercise. But overdoing it can lead to pain & injury (I have what I call gardeners knee & now shoulder) Here are 4 tips on how to avoid injury:-

  • Warm Up - light raking or walking warms up the muscles. Do light stretching before, during & after your gardening session
  • Maintain Good Posture - particularly the core muscles - and body movements. Use your legs & keep your back straight when picing up large or heavy objects; hold objects close to your body to prevent back pain & strain
  • Practise Erganomics - stay close to the ground to trowel, plant & weed. Wear knee pads & make sure tools are sharp when pruning or sawing
  • Pace Yourself - Take breaks & change tasks to avoid overuse of certain muscle groups

I hope this explains things
Happy Grubbing

Gardenia Trellis

No comments:

Post a Comment