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Recent articles
Unleashing a Diploma of Applied Permaculture Design
Sep 1, 2010
The Gaia University International DAPD Design Team enthusiastically presents our community with a draft design for the Diploma of Applied Permaculture Design (DAPD). Through this diploma, Gaia University International seeks to train and empower the next generation of action-oriented permaculture designers.
Sunchokes and the Permaculture Principle: Work with Nature
Aug 2, 2010
The sunchokes (
Helianthus tuberosus
) that we planted many years ago have provided us perennially with abundant crops for eating and sharing, a beautiful stand of 8 - 10' tall plants which we love looking at and are later used as a carbon crop for the compost, and small flowers which offer pollen and nectar to bees and other insects. All these outputs require very little input and most of that is in the form of harvesting the tubers.
Jersey Milk Cows and the Permaculture Principle: Catch and Store Energy
Jul 4, 2010
I am going to relate a milk cow with one of the 12 principles David Holmgren defines:
Catch and store energy
. By developing systems that collect resources when they are abundant, we can use them in times of need. A milk cow is a great example of storing sunlight, transferred through the grass she consumes then to the milk we drink. By having a milk cow allowed to forage on grasslands, we are drinking a little sunshine in every glass.
Watercress and the Principle: Relinquish Power
Jun 1, 2010
It is the full moon and the frog ponds are exploding in chorus. Often times at this time of year I go down to the pond and gather watercress to add to salads and soups. This year I decided I would try to propagate the plant so I could have it close to my backdoor for harvest.
John Valenzuela Interview on Food Forests and Rare and Unique Fruit
May 28, 2010
Listen below to the engaging conversation with John Valenzuela on ways to grow a food forest, what types of foods to grow and what elements are involved. John shares some of his top species in the different layers of a food forest. John also shares great stories of his travels and work as a Permaculturalist.
Oyster Mushrooms and the Permaculture Principle: Everything Gardens
May 1, 2010
Mushrooms are excellent examples of letting nature do her work. Oyster mushrooms in particular are excellent at getting the regenerating work done on our planet if we direct them in the appropriate ways. With mycoremediation, toxic wastelands that cover a vast amount of land in the world can be reborn into beautiful green pastures, forests and gardens.
April Featured Species: Chicory and the Permaculture Principle: Succession of Evolution
Apr 8, 2010
Chicory (
Cichorium intybus
) is a great permaculture plant that works tirelessly to dig heavy clay soil and move nutrients around even while I sleep. Chicory is a pioneer species which grows in difficult and disturbed environments. When the chicory has done a good job loosening the soil by digging with its deep taproot, I can come in afterwards and replace the chicory with other plants.
Chapter One Earth Action Training
Mar 26, 2010
Earth Action Training is about gaining the tools to apply permaculture immediately into your life. It is our hope that all students who take this course also take action in their own communities.
March Featured Species: Edible Acorn Oaks and the Permaculture Principle: Make the Least Change for the Greatest Possible Effect
Mar 4, 2010
The oak tree demonstrates the permaculture principle:
Make the Least Change for the Greatest Possible Effect
. By planting oak trees (oaks need cross pollination in order to bear fruit), you are not only ensuring that you will have an excellent source of food for your permaculture design, but you are also providing habitat and food for wildlife and domestic animals, cooling the earth, providing potential harvestable wood and planting trees that will outlive your great, great grandkids.
February Featured Species: Chickens and the Permaculture Principle: The Yield of the System is Theoretically Unlimited
Jan 28, 2010
I have been keeping chickens throughout my life. I have many fond childhood memories of going out in the morning excited to collect eggs and feed the chickens. Chickens have so many purposes and benefits in a permaculture system and I often give the example of the permaculture principle:
The Yield of the System is Theoretically Unlimited
when talking about chickens. The only limit on the number of uses of a resource possible within a system lies within a lack of information and the imagination of the designer.
more articles >>