It sounds like our permaculture designer is:
TrustworthyA fantastic listenerImaginativeLocally available, where practicalFast, but not necessarily flashyPurposeful with their public portfolio of previous projectsD.I.T.Y. friendly (Do it Together / Yourself). And last but not least...Able to creatively look within and through the client's constraints (especially financial) to envision the permaculture possible.
Rachel Lindsay wrote: Didn't Mr. Mollison say that the "only limits were the imagination of the designer"? Constantly I wish I could hire someone's imagination, to look at my itty bitty city lot, and and just tell me some things I could do with it. But I will never in this life be able to afford to pay for that!
How can the gap be bridged between people who need designers but can't afford to pay them what they deserve to be paid? If that conundrum could be solved, this world would absolutely come alive with gardens, really really fast, I think.
Yes, that Mollisonian saying is pretty cool, Rachel! Interesting enough, I noticed in addition to imagination, in the big black book he lists "information" as another limit. But nowadays with a plethora of books and computers and the internet (and this website) at our disposal, we've truly entered an age where information can be consumed and integrated radically quickly...and even displayed artfully.
Let's see. How to bridge the gap? Ideas off the top of my head:
A)
Altruistic designer who does it for the joy of it all, or at reduced price to still "obtain a yield" -- cover their food / time / energy costs of making the design.
B)
Non-profit designer who is paid by alternative means by a third party as an act of service. Provides high quality but the customer's bill is shifted elsewhere.
C)
Kick-back designer who receives the first (or second or third) fruits of the client's yield of their design.
D)
Micro-designer who breaks bigger permaculture consultations into small, bite-sized or nano-scale design products for lesser coin than a full consultation. Imagine a la carte purchases for various steps of the permaculture process, or sectors, or zones, or specific designed elements.
E)
Rapid-designer who does things fast and sloppy with plenty of imaginative sprinkles. Imagine renting a designer for a 7 minute design session, 7 hour design session, or 7 day design session.