Idle dreamer
Irene Kightley wrote:
Who told him Permaculture was a "Supplemental agricultural practice" I wonder ?
Idle dreamer
find religion! church
kiva! hyvä! iloinen! pikkumaatila
get stung! beehives
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be antisocial! facespace
Idle dreamer
Idle dreamer
The math is easy. With a polyculture, yields of 3-10 pounds of food per square foot are easy to come up with in most climates. For comparison, commercial agriculture in California , which is way inefficient, routinely runs about 1.5-2.5 pounds per square foot per year across a wide variety of crops.
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Zone 5a in Central Ontario, Canada
Idle dreamer
http://www.greenshireecofarms.com
Zone 5a in Central Ontario, Canada
Idle dreamer
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http://www.greenshireecofarms.com
Zone 5a in Central Ontario, Canada
Idle dreamer
http://www.greenshireecofarms.com
Zone 5a in Central Ontario, Canada
Idle dreamer
Brenda
Bloom where you are planted.
http://restfultrailsfoodforestgarden.blogspot.com/
Brenda Groth wrote:
and what if you import a few things..like salt and cinnamon that you can't get in Michigan naturally?
Idle dreamer
http://www.greenshireecofarms.com
Zone 5a in Central Ontario, Canada
Idle dreamer
http://www.greenshireecofarms.com
Zone 5a in Central Ontario, Canada
http://www.greenshireecofarms.com
Zone 5a in Central Ontario, Canada
Idle dreamer
Ludi wrote:
Here's an objection to permaculture I got just today after posting Toby's "Permaculture can save humanity" video on another forum:
"I think permaculture is really cool as a supplemental agricultural practice & also good for city/town planning & architectural design in general however, I've never heard of anyone ever feeding any significant number of people (even one) on this alone."
I've mentioned Sepp Holzer and the Bullock Brothers as examples of people who feed people by permaculture. If folks can give me some other successful examples of permaculture, that would be helpful.
Idle dreamer
adunca wrote:
Rebecca Hosking asks the question "Can permaculture feed Britain?" at 31:00 in her film "A Farm for the Future" - http://www.viddler.com/explore/PermaScience/videos/4/
"Limitation is the mother of good management", Michael Evanari
Location: Southwestern Oregon (Jackson County), Zone 7
Idle dreamer
"Limitation is the mother of good management", Michael Evanari
Location: Southwestern Oregon (Jackson County), Zone 7
Jonathan_Byron wrote:
Salatin's book "Salad Bar Beef" is very good - he has a number of very good techniques: using rotational grazing to rejuvenate pastures, following the cows with grazing birds to reduce flies and produce another crop, etc. etc. Very low in external inputs (a bit of seaweed, salt and some biological soap he uses as first defense against parasites), very much consistent with permaculture. And he provides enough beef, chicken, eggs and turkey to feed as many or more people as would come from using that land for a grain to cow operation.
That which doesn't kill us makes us stronger. I think a piece of pie wouldn't kill me. Tiny ad:
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