Hi permie friends,
I'm taking an online permaculture course. They have us reading a Bill Mollison pamphlet called
PERMACULTURE TECHNIQUES BY BILL MOLLISON Pamphlet IX in the Permaculture Design Course Series. In it, he states,
Now what you do is set up proper,
permanent, well-designed small systems
for each plant you are going to
grow. If you are going to grow cucumbers,
you make these holes, put
up a wire mesh cylinder, about four
feet high, and it's permanent, and you
always grow your cucumbers there.
You work all this out. In the general
garden, you do a sort of spot rotation.
Wherever you are manuring, as in cucumbers,
potatoes, and things like
your asparagus bed, you never rotate.
For tomatoes, rotation is disadvantageous.
Tomatoes grow better on the
same spot. So you set up a permanent
tomato bed. You treat each vegetable
as a design problem.
In any community situation, it is a
Now, this is contrary to everything I have ever been taught about gardening! Won't pathogens and pests build up if you keep the same plants in the same place year after year? And won't those plants deplete the soil of certain nutrients? I am confused.