Thanks for your kind words Lorenzo,
Yes I do enjoy design and thanks to people like P.A. Yeomans, I am very keen to apply an engineers' outlook to the due diligence and process of design — I think this has been reflected in my body of work and will only continue to. I am serious too as I take a deep responsibility for the effect of my work on Gaia and on the return on investment my clients need to obtain — hence my gravitation to Holistic Management over the last decade as it is serious about financial management, much more it would seem than many in
Permaculture are.
Terraces are fun landscapes that's for sure and in so far as their matching up to Keyline that's an interesting question that I've worked on for many years not just in the mediterranean but also across SE Asia.
The main interventions I've looked at with respect to mediterranean climates is to manage soil surface coverage much better as this is clearly a massive issue. As many of the soils are calcareous, internal drainage is often not a problem, however maintain organic
carbon levels can be and this is a primary outcome of having too many annuals and not
enough (productive) perennials in the groundstory. Therefore, unless there is a compaction problem I wouldn't look at using a subsoiler on terraces. You also need to be careful of using powered machinery on rock-walled terraces as well as they were not designed for the vibration or weight OR the lack of humans available to fix them!
So do what you can to get your soils covered 100% of the time with plants, and the residues of plants. Woody mulches under the olives and composts etc.
We'll hopefully get to Italy in 2016 as part of the tour that we're planning. In the meantime check in with the likes of Matteo Mazzola, Eugenio Gras, Jairo Restrepo and Elena Parmigianni as they are all involved in some, way, shape or form in Keyline and natural farming.
Cheers,
Darren