| David Holmgren: Permaculture: Principles and Pathways beyond Sustainability | Bill Mollison: Permaculture, a Designers' Manual | Mollison: Introduction to Permaculture | Toby Hemenway: Gaia's Garden |
| 1. Observe and interact | 1. Relative location. | 1. Observe | |
| 2. Catch and store energy | 4. Efficient energy planning: zone, sector and slope | 3. Catch and Store Energy and materials | |
| 3. Obtain a yield | 12. Get a yield | ||
| 4. Apply self-regulation and accept feedback | 14. Mistakes are tools for learning | ||
| 5. Use and value renewable resources and services | Work with nature rather than against | 5. Using biological resources. | 10. Use biological and renewable resources |
| 6. Produce no waste | 6. Cycling of energy, nutrients, resources. | ||
| 7. Design from patterns to details | 8. Accelerating succession and evolution. | 9. Collaborate with succession | |
| 8. Integrate rather than segregate | Everything gardens | 2. Each element performs many functions. | 4. Each element performs multiple function |
| 9. Use small and slow solutions | 7. Small-scale intensive systems; including plant stacking and time stacking. | 7. Use Small scale intensive systems | |
| 10. Use and value diversity | 9. Diversity; including guilds. | ||
| 11. Use edges and value the marginal | 10. Edge effects. | 8. Optimize edge | |
| 12. Creatively use and respond to change | The yield of a system is theoretically unlimited | 12. Permaculture is information and imagination-intensive | 13. The biggest limit to abundance is creativity |
| 2. Connect | |||
| The problem is the solution | 11. Turn problems into solutions | ||
| 3. Each important function is supported by many elements. | 5. Each function is supported by multiple elements | ||
| Make the least change for the greatest possible effect. | 11. Everything works both ways | 6. Make the least change for the greatest effect |
Chris Badgett
Cocreator of Organic Life Guru. Have you seen what's happening over there?
| I agree. Here's the link: http://stoves2.com |