I am beginning work on an idea to teach some simple
permaculture principles to kids by letting them help to design their own playscapes. These playscapes could be fitted with lots of materials for experimentation as well: sand boxes, gutters, clay, wind socks, windmills, mini ponds, sundials, garden beds and potting equipment... With these "toys" they would discover through play how natural energies can be directed to perform useful tasks (including their own natural energies!) And, of course, easy to grow edibles would be included:
trees, shrubs, herbs and veggies. Small animals, like
rabbits,
chickens, fish, earthworms and soldier flies could also be raised and their life cycles observed. Vines, bamboo and grasses could be used for different nature crafts as well.
Any produce they don't eat can be sold at mock farmer's markets, or even real ones to raise funds for more projects. Children could also get family and friends to sponsor their projects. Each element, whether a garden,
pond, playhouse or fruit tree guild, could be considered a "pod", with each item priced within the pod as "peas". Sponsors could purchase a whole "pod" or just a "pea". (Older kids would probably prefer a different illustration). Each child could have a
facebook page or blog to post pictures, videos and to write about their ongoing progress so that their sponsors could interact and see how their investments were faring.
A more in depth, directed curriculum, with hand-on activities for site analysis (sun,
water, wind, soil), mapping, assembling of elements based on relationships, succession, stacking functions and elements, and other
permaculture principles, is also in the works, giving the playspace the double function of outdoor classroom.
Local farm tours and workshops would also be included, as kids would seek advice from practitioners for their chosen projects. Crafts using recycled materials would have a place, both in their gardens and to raise funds, and they can organize "crop mobs" to help each other out with the bigger tasks.
Here's what I've done so far with my two daughters, ages 7 and 9. We sat down and made an idea cloud, just calling out words as we thought of them that went along with an edible landscape/garden/playscape/homestead. Then, I gave them paper and crayons and asked them to draw their own dream gardens. I was amazed at the diversity they included. Do children naturally think in
polyculture? The 9 yo drew a playhouse that doubled as a tool shed, complete with a wind vane on the roof, a series of two connected ponds, a fruit tree, a butterfly bush, a traditional veggie and flower garden, a keyhole garden (we watched videos about these a few days before), a picnic table that doubled as a potting table, a brick path, a sandbox, a bunny
tractor (
chicken tractor with a bottom), a hand pump for water, swarming
bees and butterflies, and
chickens, pigs and sheep in paddocks (this was not a permanent thing, she said, but was to show they had been through there first to get the soil ready, since that is our homestead practice already). The 7 yo also had a playhouse/tool shed, double
pond (with frog and lily pads), fruit tree, bunny tractor, and she added lots more shrub fruits and flowers. There were also lots of rainbows and when her dad asked her how she would grow those, she answered that they would come when it was raining and the sun shone through. (I know, duh, right?) We came up with the idea for a more permanent rainbow with different colored flowers growing on a
trellis "tunnel".
The next step will be promoting their projects on the web and raising funds. A few different craft items made ahead of time to send as a thank-you sponsors wouldn't hurt either. If we get their projects off the ground, I'd like to expand to include others in the neighborhood and region. I have recently been certified with a
PDC, so this
project would be one niche to get some design mileage while raising my kids and working on our family homestead.
I would love further suggestions if anyone has any.