It's time to get positive about negative thinking -Art Donnelly
There is no need to over think this. Think along the lines of old fashioned British cooking. Anything that would have gone in a stew is probably going to grow where you are and is probably the ideal food to eat in the winter down there. Lots of root veg for the winter. Summer food is whatever grows easily there in the summer. Don't worry about trying to force plants that come from much warmer climates. They might be ideal for health if you are in the tropics or whatever but that doesn't mean they are necessary for optimum health in your climate. Fruit is probably not going to be very important where you are anyway.pebble wrote:
I notice when reading about permaculture there is a large focus on plants that produce fruit. Also vegetables. I'm curious about this because from a nutritional point of view fruit and veges are important but they don't supply the crucial fats and proteins, or even the amount of carbohydrates that most people need (that's a gross generalisation from the climate I live in - maritime temperate).
A friend of mine has his dad come to stay for a week or two every year. His dad thinks he is doing everyone a favour by shooting any pigeons that come into the garden. My friend hates it because he is the one that is expected to prepare and cook the pigeons. He says it's a real pain in the wossname because they are a bit fiddly and he would rather butcher one of the chickens or buy something from the supermarket.Hugh H. wrote:
A bit OT, but does anyone have any resources for keeping pigeons? We have heaps of feral pigeons around and I've often wondered if they would be good eating. I have heard there is some disease they can carry which is best avoided. I seem to remember Mollison talking about pigeon houses in the black book. I think it's funny that they are considered a gourmet product when they are a dime a dozen, at least here.
BenB wrote:
Hope this helps. Feel free to call me out on concerns you may have. I love talking about this stuff!
permaguy wrote:
My concern is that veganism is not suitable for everyone because it rely on conversion from simple forms to more complicated one, and not all people is genetically apt to do this.
Idle dreamer
No. Farming area.Hugh H. wrote:
Warren: Your mate wasn't living in an urban area I take it, if he was shooting the pigeons?
3 years really isn't long at all. Most young people (you fit into this bracket) could do ok on just about any diet good or bad for a few years. Some of us here have been there, done that and it didn't work for us.BenB wrote:
I feel like I should chime in here as I have been eating a primarily fruit based diet for over 3 years now. In addition, I study nutrition even more than I study permaculture so I have a very firm grasp of what humans need in order to not just survive, but to live in optimal health.
If you click on my name you should find a link that says "Show the last posts of this person" There's a load of them there. I've also made similar posts on another board and am just a bit bored with talking about it.Hugh H. wrote:Warren: I agree with your experience about fruit not being filling when you are doing physical labour. Actually I find most things in a vegan or even vegetarian diet don't have the ability to make me feel full for hours at a time the way that meat does (I eat vegetarian most of the time).
I also agree that it takes quite a while for the body's long-term stores to be affected by a new diet.
Can you point us in the direction of any threads where you've said the stuff you don't want to repeat before? I couldn't see anything from you on these forums.
BenjaminBurchall wrote:I think it's funny that some argue that veganism is the natural human diet and/or the diet that is best. Without modern conveniences and knowledge it is virtually impossible to be a vegan and not experience failure to thrive especially in childhood. Afterall, tofu and all fake meats are processed foods that require chemicals to process them. They are heavily dependent on fossil fuels for their existence.
.
I'm also keen to know if any permies have done work on this - looking at diet from a nutritional and sustenance point of view in a permaculture context, rather than looking at designing a piece of land to produce food sustainably. Is there something missing there?
permaguy wrote:
My concern is that veganism is not suitable for everyone because it rely on conversion from simple forms to more complicated one, and not all people is genetically apt to do this.
So, vegans may be short on the following nutrition requierments, if their body can convert precursors :
* Vitamin A from betacarotene (source)
permaguy wrote:
* Long chain omega-3 from short chain omega-3 (source)
permaguy wrote:
And animals products is also an interesting source of vitamin D in winter, and of vit B12 (sun dried mushrooms are a good source of vit D2, but i'm not sure it is an effective source of vit D contrary to vit D3)
H Ludi Tyler wrote:
That's my main problem with veganism also - not everyone has the same ability to metabolize certain nutrients. People with certain genetic backgrounds of regional types or ecotypes of humans (what used to be called "races") can vary significantly in their ability to metabolize foods. It's the main problem with the modern industrial diet also, why there's so much diabetes among people from certain genetic backgrounds, the inability to metabolize simple carbohydrates properly.
Warren David wrote:
3 years really isn't long at all. Most young people (you fit into this bracket) could do ok on just about any diet good or bad for a few years. Some of us here have been there, done that and it didn't work for us.
I have found that fruit really isn't any good when doing physical work outside in cold weather. It made me feel the cold more and I ran out of energy quicker. It really doesn't seem natural to be eating much fruit in the middle of winter anyway.
I agree with you about the calcium. Just about everybody is getting the calcium they need without having to use dairy.
The rest of it I really can't be bothered getting into because it's just he same old stuff about the China study etc that I've read before. Sorry but I don't feel like repeating stuff that I've said so many times before.
Hugh H. wrote:
BenB: I think your statement about protein is misleading. Yes, vegetables have all the essential amino acids, but they are called "incomplete" because they are not in the correct ratio for human use (except for soybeans etc.) I think this is a fairly well established and accepted fact. If you eat a combination of vegetables and fruits then you should get an OK ratio.
Hugh H. wrote:
I can't remember if the China Study discusses traditional diets high in meat, I haven't read it for a while. The question that comes to mind is whether there could be other causative factors in cancer cell generation which haven't been accounted for. The hypothesis about high protein diets doesn't seem to match with reality in some cases.
BenjaminBurchall wrote:
It is also worthy of note that there are no vegan hunter-gatherer societies today or in the past and very few vegan societies at all. The ones that are vegan are so for religious/spiritual reasons.
BenjaminBurchall wrote:
I think it's funny that some argue that veganism is the natural human diet and/or the diet that is best. Without modern conveniences and knowledge it is virtually impossible to be a vegan and not experience failure to thrive especially in childhood. Afterall, tofu and all fake meats are processed foods that require chemicals to process them. They are heavily dependent on fossil fuels for their existence.
BenjaminBurchall wrote:
Personally, I wouldn't want to see any zealous diet proscriptions in permaculture. (Thankfully no one here is doing that..) In real life, I have experienced diet zealots in the permaculture movement and I've seen it be a deterrent to a lot of people that might otherwise become permies. I think it's better to stick to how to grow food for whatever diet we happen to follow without getting into which diet is best or we risk alienating each other and others needlessly.
maikeru wrote:
Tofu has been around long before oil became all the craze (starting 2,000 years ago or so...). Tofu burgers and tofu lasagna not so much.
BenB wrote:
That actually isn't true. The traditional diets of the Sardinians and Okinawans were primarily vegan.
If you choose the other path, you would have to find a way to chase down the animal, rip into its tough hide with your dull canine teeth and flimsy fingernails. You would be tasting its warm blood as it is still trying to get away.
BenB wrote:
I think it is helpful to look towards human's closest living relative, the bonobo. They have an extremely similar physiology to ours and guess what their diet is. Mostly fruits and vegetables.
BenjaminBurchall wrote:
I don't know about Sardinians, but the Okinawan diet contains quite a bit of meat and much more vegetables over starchy foods than the Japanese diet.
TheDirtSurgeon wrote:
I would guess that the emphasis on fruits and vegetables stems from the sources you're reading. It seems reasonable to guess that the majority of permaculture practitioners are city dwellers with backyard gardens -- and one thing about most cities, they don't allow the keeping of livestock. So meat still has to come from somewhere else. My garden can supply my vegetables... but not my annual side of beef, whole hog, and few dozen chickens.
i've grown multiple salad greens, spinach, culinary herbs, kale to name a few..I also put some pitcher plants in pots and venus fly traps to keep the insects down within my house..BenjaminBurchall wrote:
I'm lucky to live in a city that does allow some livestock. Depends on the particular neighborhood and how big your lot is. The big "but" is if you live in an apartment or condo, you don't have a lot and maybe not even a patio or balcony. You just have what's inside your four walls - which is my case now. (I'm in the process of obtaining some land.)
So I've been thinking about what a person can grow inside without increasing their power bill. Mushrooms! That was the first thing that came to mind. Then I thought, "Escargots!" I like escargots, but they are expensive at a restaurant. You don't need additional lighting to raise mushrooms and escargot. An indoor gardening could also grow sprouts and salad greens. Salad greens plants placed by a window or skylight do just fine. If you're okay with using a little bit more electricity, you can give them a little artificial lighting.
I've done salad growing inside. Mushrooms and escargots would be new for me. I've been researching how to go them and it looks easy enough. Any suggestions for what else could be grown indoors with little or no additional electricity use?
christhamrin wrote:
good original question. mark shepard of new forest farm in wisconsin thinks permanent tree crops, specifically chestnuts and hazelnuts, ought to replace the role of corn and soybeans, respectively, in industrial agriculture.
Interesting points ben. A general question to all. Aren't ya forgetting theBenB wrote:
BenB wrote:
There is only one species-specific diet for humans,
Idle dreamer
BenjaminBurchall wrote:
I don't know about Sardinians, but the Okinawan diet contains quite a bit of meat and much more vegetables over starchy foods than the Japanese diet.
That makes the assumption that humans only hunting game. Think about all the other animals that humans have eaten historically even before modern humans - fish and other water creatures, insects, snails, etc. Humans have been using tools to catch and prepare their food for eating since before homo sapiens. The information we have does tell us that humans have been omnivors for hundreds of thousands of years. Whatever choice we make now about what we want to eat is just that - a choice. And it's built on modern convenience rather than environmental necessity as was in the distant past.
We'll probably attract more new permies if we don't make them feel that we're demonizing their food choices or telling them they are somehow immoral for eating animals. I've found that when people start raising some of their own food, they usually modify their diets because it just makes good financial sense to eat more of what they can grow for free.
BenjaminBurchall wrote:
We aren't bonobos. Usually, I see chimpanzees as the closet to us on the evolutionary tree. Either way, both chimps and bonobos as far as I know eat insects and small mammals in their native habitats. I think we should be careful about saying what the "one" natural diet is for humans especially if we're doing so by comparing us to another animal. We aren't any other animal but homo sapiens.
BenB wrote:
I didn't mean to insinuate that we are just talking about game. Fish, seafood, insects, snails, grubs, etc. These are all things that humans aren't equipped to eat.
Idle dreamer
BenB wrote:
But I just believe people should know that if they choose to grow all of their food themselves, but they are dependent on animal foods as a staple, they aren't doing their health any favors.
Idle dreamer
BenB wrote:
Well I suppose it's up for debate about which one is closer but they are both really close to the human DNA. When we look at nature, closely related species ALWAYS have closely related diets. There aren't huge swings such as one branch eating animal-based foods and another branch eating plant based foods. Generally it is simply a matter of WHICH animal foods and which plant foods a particular species eats. So if we look at bonobos OR chimpanzees, we see that there is one particular food they favor above ALL others. I'll let you check it out for yourself: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_chimpanzee
As for the incredibly small amount of insects and raw animal guts these guys will eat, I don't have a problem if you are into that. Chow down.
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