Idle dreamer
Idle dreamer
... it´s about time to get a signature ...
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Today is a very exciting time in my life. I am on a wonderful adventure and will never go through this particular experience again.
Faren Leader wrote: I find that so sad, and it's harmful to the Permaculture community as a fringe group who, for the sake of our species' future ability to inhabit this earth and remain in good health, needs to become less of a fringe group in the coming decades.
Idle dreamer
Joseph Lofthouse wrote:When I talk to other farmer's about farming. We talk about real things, and real results... Yellow doll ripens 5 days earlier than other watermelons. About 1 customer in 5 prefers the taste of yellow watermelons to red watermelons. Irrigating within 2 days after the canal company de-mosses sets crops back. etc...
When permaculturists talk to me, it tends to be more abstract and theoretical... More like a religion to do on the Internet, and less like a way of life that I can do every day on the farm.
The local farmers are pragmatists... Plodding along day after day, and year after year, growing things like they have been grown since time immemorial. The Internet permaculturalists seem more fanciful. Grabbing hold of ideas and promoting them with fervor, and seemingly giving little thought to the externalized costs of doing things that way.
For example, when I have calculated the pragmatic costs of applying mulch to my farm, it ends up that I'd be consuming the entire mulch production capabilities of my county in order to do so, and it would cost me more than a growing season's worth of labor to apply it. And the cost of the mulch would be more than the cost of the land.
Permaculturalists tend to not be aware of things that matter to farmers. For example, today on the thread about pruning apple trees, someone said that they shake their apples onto the ground in order to harvest them. As a primate, I eat plenty of apples that have fallen onto the ground. As a farmer, I can't sell any apples that have fallen onto the ground.
Tyler Ludens wrote:
Faren Leader wrote: I find that so sad, and it's harmful to the Permaculture community as a fringe group who, for the sake of our species' future ability to inhabit this earth and remain in good health, needs to become less of a fringe group in the coming decades.
What solution do you see to this problem?
Today is a very exciting time in my life. I am on a wonderful adventure and will never go through this particular experience again.
Check out Redhawk's soil series: https://permies.com/wiki/redhawk-soil
Faren Leader wrote:
Tyler Ludens wrote:
What solution do you see to this problem?
At the very least, more regulation over who is allowed to lead permaculture courses and PDCs.
Every day above dirt is a good day
“All good things are wild, and free.” Henry David Thoreau
Gert in the making
"Also, just as you want men to do to you, do the same way to them" (Luke 6:31)
Inge Leonora-den Ouden wrote:
It's true the 'image' of the movement is that of 'alternative' (weird, strange, not ordinary). But the 'alternative movement' is growing. Organic products are making their appearance in the supermarkets (and people buy them). Natural building appears in town neighbourhoods (even straw bale houses!). Townships allow community groups to start a food forest in the park, or even have the fruit trees and berry bushes planted themselves ... But they don't use the word permaculture ...
Idle dreamer
Artie Scott wrote:
Can one be a permie and still choose a flushing toilet?
Is composting poo an essential element? It is not entirely clear.
"Study books and observe nature; if they do not agree, throw away the books." ~ William A. Albrecht
Tyler Ludens wrote:
Inge Leonora-den Ouden wrote: ...
I think not only the word "permaculture" is missing from this picture, but permaculture itself. Permaculture is a design system which integrates a food-producing landscape with human habitation. To me, the examples you give above are not integrated with each other: The organic products are in the supermarkets. Natural building is in neighborhoods. A food forest is in the park. These things are separate from each other, not part of a total design. So even though all these things - organic food, natural building, food forests - can be parts of permaculture, they are not themselves actually permaculture, which is a total system.
I don't think people will be able to grasp what permaculture actually is if it is presented as a bunch of parts stuck randomly into the conventional landscape/way of living, because the essence of permaculture, the design, is completely missing.
"Also, just as you want men to do to you, do the same way to them" (Luke 6:31)
Examine your lifestyle, multiply it by 7.7 billion other ego-monkeys with similar desires and query whether that global impact is conscionable.
Your friend isn't always right and your enemy isn't always wrong.
Phil Swindler wrote:My sister saw my copy of David Holmgren's Permaculture Pathways & Principles Beyond Sustainability sitting out.
She assumed it was some new age philosophy.
I had to explain.
So, I have no doubt there's some misconceptions out there.
Gert in the making
Richard Gorny wrote: The language we use is one of the most important factors that influences perception. One small word can make a difference. If you scream "never turn the soil" you immediately turn off a half of the audience, if you say "try not to turn soil unless absolutely necessary" they might stay and listen for a bit longer ;)
Your friend isn't always right and your enemy isn't always wrong.
James Freyr wrote:
I think the essential part may depend on who is asked. Since discovering Permies and learning so much here, I certainly now see poop as a resource and not waste. Am I utilizing this resource? No. Not right now at this time in my life at least. I do pee outdoors as much as I can, on my compost pile, or on the grass, around plants and trees if I'm too far away from the compost pile.
“All good things are wild, and free.” Henry David Thoreau
Learn to dance in the rain.
www.serenityhillhomestead.com
Tyler Ludens wrote:I would like to discuss that also, Joseph! Especially since one of the ongoing complaints from people who want to practice permaculture is that they don't have access to land, when there are many older people with land practically begging for people to work it. Lack of land is not the problem, it seems to me, the problem is how to get the people onto the land, where they want to be.
The negative part of me thinks the complaint is not so much "I don't have access to land" as it is "I want someone to give me some land, for free."
Could you start a thread about the idea of cultural continuity of permaculture? I'd really like to see what people have to say. The culture part of permaculture is barely developing, has a long way to go before it is actually a culture.
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Simone Gar wrote: I agree with Rue Barbie that there needs to be more serious and professional appearance and approach to attract the masses. I think composting toilets, communes, worm composting etc. is just too far away from mainstream life. Eating healthy, non-treated foods is not. Baby steps. Maybe in 50 years composting toilets are the norm. And again, speak the language that the people speak right now. Nice packaging, decent logo design and good looking/tasty food/flowers/plants/whatever is attractive.
My books, movies, videos, podcasts, events ... the big collection of paul wheaton stuff!
Simone Gar wrote:
Tyler Ludens wrote:
Simone Gar wrote:
However, I agree with Rue Barbie that there needs to be more serious and professional appearance and approach to attract the masses.
Can you give an example of a permaculturist who is reaching a large audience, such as Paul is doing here with permies, who exhibits the appropriate seriousness and appearance?
I am talking main stream. Yes Paul has large audience here in the permie world but go ask anybody on the street. Nobody will know Paul. Nobody knows Geoff Lawton.
I am talking reaching people not permies.
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Rue Barbie wrote:Thank you very much for the graph, and that site. In terms of 'trending', except for somewhat of a rise near the end, over the years it is not going up that much.
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Simone Gar wrote:Ok let's start over. The initial post was
In a recent thread someone stated that Permaculture has a bad image . I was surprised by this statement . And I strongly disagree.
Anyone else have this view and why ?
The second comment from Zach was about a farmer that seems to be interested but the “image projected by permaculture sources that put him off”.
In my experience (locally where I live) permaculture does have a "bad" reputation outside of the hippie/greenie community.
My books, movies, videos, podcasts, events ... the big collection of paul wheaton stuff!
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