Mamalana Bliss

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since Jul 22, 2022
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Recent posts by Mamalana Bliss

The Advanced Permaculture Apprenticeship with a focus on Animal Systems is an intensive educational experience centered on permaculture design for integrated animal systems. Rather than stepping into routine farm labor, apprentices participate directly in the assessment, design, and implementation of systems for goats, pigs, poultry, and other small livestock on a developing homestead. Under guided instruction, apprentices learn how to read a landscape, evaluate infrastructure, map opportunities and constraints, and create designs that integrate animals, plants, soil, and human use into a cohesive, functional whole.

The program includes 80 hours of structured instruction, covering topics such as site assessment, sector analysis, paddock design, grazing patterns, water and fencing layout, species needs, nutrient flows, and practical strategies for building regenerative systems from the ground up. Apprentices then move from theory into practice—translating their designs into real implementation steps, improving existing structures, and establishing early-stage systems that support long-term resilience.

As part of this integrative approach, apprentices also study animal health and wellness, including behavior observation, recognizing stress or illness, nutrition, enrichment, parasite management, and species-specific care. Instruction additionally includes humane animal processing (as appropriate), whole-animal utilization, and foundational farm-to-table food preparation, emphasizing respect and ecological responsibility.

This apprenticeship includes room and board, providing a grounded, immersive learning environment. Because the homestead is newly established, apprentices have the rare opportunity to engage deeply with the full design cycle: assessment → concept → plan → implementation → reflection. This is an ideal experience for those who want to build skill and confidence not just in managing systems, but in creating them through thoughtful, informed, regenerative design.

Instructor -
Alana Bliss is a regenerative land steward, permaculturalist, and educator with over 20 years of hands-on experience in animal systems, homesteading, and community-scale ecosystem design. She has lived, taught, and farmed across multiple bioregions — Costa Rica, Tennessee, Minnesota, and now the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains in Virginia.

Her work integrates Waldorf-inspired education, holistic animal husbandry, ecological design, family-centered living, and a deep commitment to healing the relationship between humans, animals, and the Earth.

Alana specializes in integrated animal systems, including goats, pigs, poultry, rabbits, bees, grazing design, fodder systems, and forest–pasture ecotones. On her teaching homestead, Regenerative Roots, she mentors learners through immersive hands-on experience, grounded in respect for the animals, ecological literacy, and practical farm management.

She brings a warm, grounded, and deeply intuitive approach to both teaching and land stewardship — empowering students to step confidently into regenerative agriculture, homesteading, and community leadership.
2 weeks ago
Secluded Homestead with Abundant Natural Resources on 16.25 Unrestricted Acres, Close to Morristown and Knoxville in Grainger County.

Ready-made for your homesteading dreams, this self-sufficient haven, nestled on fertile, unrestricted land, boasts 40+ fruit trees, 5 ponds - 3 of which are stocked with fish, plus a year-round and seasonal creek. The large garden has not been treated with synthetic fertilizers, herbicides, or pesticides for at least 10 years, making it ideal for organic growing.

Structures include a cabin, three small outbuildings, a workshop, 3 RV spots wired for 50 amps, a chicken coop with a run, and fiber optic high-speed internet connected to the property. One of the sheds is newly built and sturdy, perfect for additional storage or projects. There’s also a ready-to-build house site, pastures perfect for goats or pigs, and a lush forest planted for future pine harvest, interspersed with young deciduous maple and oak trees.

The property comes fully equipped with 400amp electric service, a septic system, compost toilet and a gravity-fed potable water system from a tested spring. Designed by the previous owner for complete off-grid living, the land features water-harvesting systems, including well-built ponds and ditches.

In addition to the rich soil and abundant water, wildlife thrives here. You'll find hunting tree stands, crawfish near the wetlands, and ample space for growing, raising livestock, or simply enjoying the tranquility of nature. Whether you're seeking a sustainable lifestyle, peaceful homestead, or a family compound, this property has endless potential.

Conveniently located close to public boat ramp for Cherokee Lake access, just south of Clinch Mountain, 30 minutes from Morristown for all your shopping needs and just an hour from Knoxville, this one-of-a-kind opportunity is not to be missed!

SERIOUS INQUIRIES ONLY, PLEASE.

Realtor commission negotiable.

Contact: RegenerativeLifeFellowship@proton.me
4two23-22zero-22two5
As a mother of 5, I am grateful to have had each one and wouldn't take it back. My children have grown up or are growing up in pemraculture. They understand and follow the ethics and principles. If I didn't birth them at home, raise them to be regenerative, or support them emotionally to be self confident, then maybe they would part of the problem. To me its far more important to have children that are raised in the culture of permaculture than to not have children. I have dedicate my life to Regenerative Parenting. To me that is the answer. Otherwise we could end up either in a distopian dictatorship where our reproductive rights are oppressed or we have Idiocracy, where the smart people stop having children and those who don't care or are dumb keep having lots and lots of children.
Ok. I did it. I am starting off with an Online Introduction Class. I would love to hear your feedback.

1 year ago
I feel y'all. I definitely prefer in person. But seems i the world wants everything online. I have been resistant to offering online classes. Maybe I just need to surrender.
1 year ago
How about a hybrid style? Seems like the best of both worlds.
1 year ago
Now that we are living in the future and you can learn from the comfort of your own couch. But how much do you learn? Or is it more enriching to be living in a active model where we can experience the lifestyle?


Which one is best for Permaculture and people?
1 year ago
Update:
There is still 2 apprenticeship opportunity available.
 
 * Social Systems Design and Management
                   and
 * Permaculture Design.

Email me if interested.
We now have a fully functioning Farm and Forest School happening onsite. I am also actively doing permaculture design work again too. You would be working with me directly.

Alana

Here is my bio:
Alana Bliss has been exploring, studying, and practicing holistic sustainable solutions for many years. She received her Permaculture Design Certification in 2005. Permaculture is a design science that merges all aspects of culture to create systems that increase carrying capacity of land while regenerating ecosystems. Alana has worked as a community builder, entrepreneur, and project manager with a focus on regenerative systems. 

Alana co-founded the Fruition Center for Holistic Ecology in Costa Rica after she and her family converted a diesel school bus RV to run on used veggie oil and drove to Costa Rica from Minnesota. There she facilitated volunteers, interns, and students in a hands on exploration of a regenerative lifestyle. Alana places special attention on social systems to support people in connecting with each other and their environment. 

Alana returned to Minneapolis where she and her husband started an Ecological Design and installation business. They used Permaculture ethics, principles, and design practices to transform urban spaces into sanctuaries for people and wildlife. Alana also worked with a nonprofit to distribute free organic food to people throughout the Twin Cities. 

Most recently, Alana has co-facilitated the establishment of a community farmstead in eastern Tennessee. She currently lives there with 4 of her 5 children, her husband, other families, and lots of animals.  She is also working on a village scale community that has a core set of guiding principles focused on health freedom, respect, and thrivability
1 year ago