Permaculture Design Lectures
Permaculture Design Lectures
Permaculture Design Lectures
important?
This is week 1 of our yearlong #freepermaculture course
Whether this is the first time you’ve heard of permaculture, or you’re sure you already know
what it is, it’s important for us to launch our course with this fundamental inquiry, and
investigate the ways in which we can agree on our basic purpose while still holding space for
a diversity of attitudes and approaches.
In a nutshell:
Why Permaculture?
A permaculture design process can help you:
Un
leash your inner geek!
As we go deeper into our studies, over the next 52 weeks, we will learn many ways to work
with plants. But first, let's look at the foundational reasons why plants are so important, by
exploring the ideas that started the permaculture movement, back in the 1970's.
1. Nothing in nature grows forever. There is a constant cycle of decay and rebirth.
2. Continuation of life depends on the maintenance of the global bio-geochemical cycles
of essential elements, in particular carbon, oxygen, nitrogen, sulphur, and phosphorus.
3. The probability of extinction of populations or a species is greatest when the density is
very high or very low. Both crowding and too few individuals of a species may reach
thresholds of extinction.
4. The chance that a species has to survive and reproduce is dependent primarily upon
one or two key factors in the complex web of relations of the organism to its
environment.
5. Our ability to change the face of the earth increases at a faster rate than our ability to
foresee the consequence of change.
6. Living organisms are not only means but ends. In addition to their instrumental value
to humans and other living organisms, they have an intrinsic worth.
And here is the original list of permaculture principles, as presented by Mollison and
Holmgren:
Can you see how these ideas could help you to design not only a garden and homestead,
but also a social and emotional landscape that is more resilient, abundant, and safe than
the current (degenerative) systems in which most of us now exist?
The entire first module of our certification course is available here for free. It includes the
content from the above article, plus several more videos, a detailed exploration of
permaculture basics, and a list of essential resources. So, if you haven’t already taken this free
introduction to permaculture class, then jump in! It’s fun!
CHECK IT OUT
Now it's your turn! Hands-on
to think, write, discuss, and dive deep into exploring and experimenting with these ideas in
your daily life.
Bill Mollison and David Holmgren explain the core strengths of Here’s an awesome
permaculture.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TbxLv9EEzs8
You can have an organic garden, a composting toilet, a Hugelkultur, a heap of solar
panels, and a goat, and it still won’t be reaching its potential as “permaculture”
until those components come into relationship with each other, as a whole system.
Here's a mini-lecture:
Close your eyes and imagine your own "whole system." It's easy to let it
overwhelm you, to get lost in huge fantasies of what you will do...one day when
you win the lottery and buy a huge farm. Don't do that. Be here now, Sister bear!
Part of what makes permaculture so special is that it provides us with a tangible
framework around which to plan and implement whole systems designs in real life,
on any scale.
Patterns.
We use patterns in nature to guide us. We mimic them, we obey
them, and we work with, rather than against them. We develop our
multi-phase plans based on patterns in our lives, and we design our
gardens based on patterns in our soil, climate, and water cycles.
Principles.
Observing and adhering to natural patterns is one of the core principles of
permaculture, and there are several more, which we will learn about in the next few
weeks. Whenever we are stuck on a decision, struggling with how to prioritise
different aspects of a project, or dealing with interpersonal conflict, we rely on our
principles to guide us.
Process.
To provide a tangible structure to all of these visions and bold ideas, we need a
specific, measurable, actionable result-driven, and timebound process. That's where
GOBRADIME comes in. I use GOBRADIME in all of my permaculture work.
Place.
We're all connected to a place, and some of us are connected to several. No matter
what your goals are, you still have to sleep, eat, get warm, make friends. In its most
basic essense, every design comes back to place, and placement.
I wrote about GOBRADIME in my book, Food Not Lawns, which you now can
read for free! Here’s the direct link to the chapter that discusses GOBRADIME. Or,
if you want the quick-and-updated version, go here.
Step 2: For each item on your list, note which of the other components this item
could somehow connect to. Does your shower connect to your garden? How so?
Does your kitchen connect to your chicken coop? Where? And so on.
Step 3: Then, play with drawing it out. Don't worry about drawing maps to scale or
getting all the details! Think of it more like a game, and make a drawing of your
silly ultimate fantasy whole system design.
More stuff to do
However, though we learn and teach about the “permaculture ethics” in every class, course, and
workshop, we too often discuss these ethics as if they are apart from ourselves, and herein lies the
rub: if we are not willing to strictly adhere to these ethics ourselves, and to make a commitment, as
permaculture designers at whatever level of expertise, to BE the change, rather than just preaching
about it, then we’re wasting our time.
And so, for today’s class, we’re asking you to say it out loud, wherever you are right now: I promise
to try, every day, to study, honor, and exemplify ALL THREE ethics in my permaculture
practice.
Ok yes that feels great...but HOW?
If you can’t find a space to practice your permaculture ideas, you’re not gonna get
very far. Yes, of course you can grow pots on your patio and catch graywater from
a bucket under the bathroom sink to water them...but that’s not really permaculture,
and it would be remiss to pretend like it is. You can practice permaculture in the
city, and you can do it if you don’t own property. But if you don't have access to
land, on some level, then you have to get out there and find it.
By the same token, if you DO own property, and your plans are to
create a permaculture design there: unless you create space within
your project to include and support those less fortunate than you,
then you’re neglecting the third ethic, and probably the first two as
well. Caring for the Earth, caring for the people, and considering the
needs of others will always require us to reach far beyond our own
property and family’s needs.
Bottom line:
If you have it, share it. If you don’t have it, share something else.
If you happen to have access to land, consider opening up a section for nearby
urban dwellers to come and grow food. Or, if that’s too much for you, perhaps host
local school tours?
A case study:
In Eugene, Oregon, there’s a 33-acre organic farm called River’s Turn, and for the
last 40 years, farmer John Sundquist has hosted school buses from all over the
county for annual farm tours. The kids come in hordes and follow John around the
farm, where he talks about growing food, taking care of animals, managing the
water, and so much more. As such, now there are hundreds, if not thousands, of
grown adults all over the Eugene area who went to River’s Turn farm every single
year of their elementary education, and now their kids are going too! It’s truly
extraordinary how that one farmer was able to influence how so many kids think
about food, plants, land, and life...simply by opening his doors to the school buses a
few days a year.
However, for today, focus on your own plans for a permaculture design that works,
for you. Come and join the discussion, share your thoughts on the big picture...but
don’t get so distracted by it that you neglect the hands-on practicality of applying
these ideas to your life, right now.
Questions to ask
What’s your own version of the third ethic? How can you define it, in a way that you can
commit to, for your daily life?
If you have access to land, what are some ways you can share it? Make a list of at least ten
ideas that would feel comfortable for you...and don’t be afraid to stretch that comfort
zone! Growth is good!
If you don’t have access to land, make a list of other types of resources you could
exchange, to gain access. Time, labor, ideas, artwork, organizing...be as specific as
possible; really articulate what you would be willing to offer as a mutual exchange. After
brainstorming about it, try writing up a few paragraphs you could include in an email,
asking a local landowner about gaining access through them.
Gaining Ground
Excerpted from Food Not Lawns, How to Turn Your Yard into a
Garden and Your Neighborhood into a Community, here’s a
quick-n-dirty rundown of 8 ways for non-owners to find land on
which to grow food.
M
A provocative, creativ
Permaculture Principles: an overview and
compilation
This is week 4 of our yearlong #freepermaculture course
Neighbors using the permaculture principle “Use Edge and Value the Marginal” as guidance
for their backyard keyhole garden design. Artwork by KT Shepherd
(note: I made this video for the public, so pardon the introduction, if we're already
acquainted!)
Charles Birch and John Cobb, The Liberation of Life: From the Cell to the
Community (1984)
The Prime Directive of Permaculture: the only ethical decision is to take responsibility for
our own existence and that of our children’s.
CARE OF THE EARTH: Provision for all life systems to continue and increase.
CARE OF PEOPLE: Provision for people to access those resources necessary to their
existence.
SETTING OUR OWN LIMITS TO POPULATION AND CONSUMPTION: By
governing our own needs, we can set resources aside to further the above principles.
Life Intervention Principle: In chaos lies unparalleled opportunity for imposing creative
order.
Law of Return: Whatever we take, we must return, or Nature demands a return for every gift
received, or The user must pay.
Directive of Return: Every object must responsibly provide for its replacement. Society
must, as a conditions of use, replace an equal or greater resource than that used.
Categories of Resources:
Principle of Disorder:
Order and harmony produce energy for other uses. Disorder consumes energy to no useful
end. Neatness, tidiness, uniformity, and straightness signify an energy-maintained disorder in
natural systems.
Law of Entropy (Asimov): The total energy of the universe is constant and the total entropy
is increasing.
The Basic Law of Thermodynamics (Watt): Energy can be transferred from one form to
another, but it cannot disappear, or be destroyed, or created. No energy conversion system is
ever completely efficient.
Principle of Cyclic Opportunity: Every cyclic event increases the opportunity for yield. To
increase cycling is to increase yield. Cycles in nature are diversion routes away from entropic
ends-life itself cycles nutrients-giving opportunities for yield, and thus opportunities for
species to occupy time niches.
Types of Niches:
Principle of Stability: It is not the number of diverse things in a design that leads to stability,
it is the number of beneficial connections between these components.
The systems we construct should last as long as possible, and take least maintenance.
These systems, fuelled by the sun, should produce not only their own needs, but the
needs of the people creating or controlling them. Thus, they are sustainable, as they
sustain both themselves and those who construct them.
We can use energy to construct these systems, providing that in their lifetime, they
store or conserve more energy than we use to construct them or to maintain them.
Limits to Yield:
Yield is not a fixed sum in any design system. It is the measure of the comprehension,
understanding, and ability of the designers and managers of that design.
1. Everything works both ways – see the duality in things; positive &
negative
2. Everything works in many ways - diversity of functions, yields,
relationships
3. See solutions not problems – look for opportunities / re-adjust
relationships
4. To co-operate and not compete – this applies to natural and human
systems and relationships between different elements
5. To make things pay - i.e. everything contributes to something else -
“there’s no such thing as a free lunch”
6. To work where it counts - minimum input for maximum benefit
7. To use everything to its highest capacity
8. To bring food production back to the cities
9. To help make people self-reliant - individuals & communities
10. To minimise maintenance and energy input while maximising yield
Rosemary Morrow, Earth User’s Guide to Permaculture (1993)
Attitudinal Principles
Design Principles
Strategic Principles
Look Deep
Emphasize Diversity on All Scales
Recognize and Respond to Natural Patterns
Be Specific
Put Everyone to Work
Prohibit Waste
Use It, Move It or Lose It
Replace Consumption with Creativity
Let Autonomy Reign
Keep Your Chin Up
Cyclic Considerations: waste, water, soil, seeds, cosmos, society,
wilderness, self, and chaos.
Everything is connected.
Nature Moves in Circles.
Energy is abundant but not unlimited.
Do more with less.
Resilience is true security.
Build from the ground up.
Take responsibility: feed what you want to grow.
Get some! Obtain a yield.
Creativity is an unlimited resource.
An herb spiral garden uses the positive aspects of spiral shapes found in nature, to create a
resilient design of abundance. Artwork by KT Shepherd
The goal of today’s class is to become acquainted with the core set of patterns that make up
all matter, on every scale of the known universe, and to explore ways we can
mimic,understand, and adapt to those patterns on every scale of our permaculture design
project.
Making use of available resources...
There are so many wonderful videos about this topic online already, so rather than make
something repetitive, we’ve picked a few of our favorites to share.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IGKLZ3NO9Qk
In this sweet, simple overview, Amy Lamb shows the common recurring patterns in
nature that make up all things.
Alan Turing was less famous than Einstein or Tesla but his study of patterns changed
the way humans see, study, and interact with nature.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F1hX_nzTlgU
Biomimicry
In a permaculture context, we study biomimicry to help understand how we can apply natural
patterns to our whole systems design. Here’s an excellent short article to introduce the
concept of biomimicry.
Here’s a fun animation about biomimicry, from the folks at Sustainability Illustrated
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UHb_XNgIHFY
Hands-On
Go out for a walk in nature and see how many of these patterns you can find.
Take pictures and create your own collage, then share it!
The late, great Toby Hemenway, author of Gaia’s Garden, a Guide to Home-scale
Permaculture, often discussed how patterns in nature can be applied to every aspect
of our lives. Read an article and watch Toby here.
Two articles by illustrator, permaculture teacher, and disability advocate, Kt Shepherd:
Earth Based Spirituality & Permaculture — The 5 Elements as a Design Tool: Using Earth, Fire, Air,
Water and Spirit to as a tool to design my journey
Bringing Nature Inside: ideas for improving access to nature connection if you, or someone you are close
to, has an illness or disability meaning they find it difficult to be outdoors.
Goals: getting started with your
permaculture design project
This is week 6 of our yearlong #freepermaculture course
“The problem is the solution.” This designer is helping to transform neglected and
vandalized waste land into a vertical public garden, producing food and beneficial
connections for anyone within the community. Artwork by KT Shepherd
Today our focus is on you, the designer, and on setting clear, actionable goals for your
permaculture design project.
Setting goals is super important, but sometimes this task is easier said than done!
Check out this article about interviewing stakeholders, and use the sample below to create
your own, then conduct interviews of yourself and the other people who will be involved in
your project.
But….don’t.
Make time to get your goals and priorities crystal clear. Inhale. Study. Refine. Revel. And
create a set of SMARTER goals.
In this video, excerpted from our certification course, faculty member Jennifer Albanese
discusses turning big lofty goals into tangible objectives, by making them SMART (note we
have not updated to include those two extra, most crucial parts.)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sC_0MvkppcU
(if you want Jennifer for your dedicated faculty mentor in the PDC, just check her name on
your orientation form and she will personally help you create your design.)
As you refine your goals, you’ll need to refer back to your ethical commitments, and consider
the biological, socioeconomic, and personal/emotional costs and benefits, should these goals
be accomplished.
You’ll see the term, “attitudinal principles” in a lot of the permaculture literature, but it’s a bit of a
misnomer; it’s not so much that there are clear lines between biological principles, socioeconomic
principles, and attitudinal principles, but more so that all of these layers exist in all of the
principles.
Imagine a seed, sprouting into a tiny baby plant. Think of the metamorphosis of your goals, into
the planned set of actions (aka your permaculture design project), which transforms your goals
into tangible, edible reality. Every action you take has biological, socioeconomic, and emotional
impacts and factors to consider.
What happens if you consider each of your goals in life, through this lens? It ends up looking
a lot like those permaculture ethics, yes? Biological factors connect to Earth care;
socioeconomic factors connect to people care, and emotional factors connect to how adeptly
we can share fairly and care for the future.
So, while there are several “permaculture” principles, including but in no way limited to the
list below, that are commonly referred to as “attitudinal,” keep in mind the above mentioned
factors and see how many ways you can apply ALL the principles towards cultivating the
sharpest, most adept designer’s mind you can muster!
Here's a list of five of the most common “attitudinal principles” in the permaculture lexicon.
Without further explanation, how would you interpret these? Can you see how they could help
you shift your attitude, and perhaps open up new possibilities in your design?
Hands-On
Conduct “client” interviews with yourself and the other stakeholders in your project. Use one
of the samples included in today's class, or create your own.
Create at least three SMARTER goals for your permaculture design project.
Spend a few minutes journaling about each of the five “attitudinal principles” listed above,
and then go back through your SMARTER goals and client interview questionnaire. What
changed? How does shifting your attitude shift your goals? Do they seem more possible? Are
you able to use “attitudinal principles” to help mak
e your goals SMARTER?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8giuubO7_d8
What is an ecosystem?
If this is a new concept to you, or even if you think you know what ecosystems are, take a
minute to read the Wikipedia article on the topic--it’s actually a solid overview, and will set
the stage for the rest of today’s class.
Here’s a lovely introduction, from the Khan Academy, to how energy flows and matters are
cycled through ecosystems.
food web
Teaching Yourself About Permaculture
Rosemary Morrow’s book, Earth User’s Guide to Permaculture, is an essential for
every permaculture bookshelf. But also, even if you don’t feel prepared to teach
permaculture yet, her Earth User’s Guide to Teaching Permaculture is a powerful
tool for learning, either alone or in a peer group. If you’ve got a book budget, get
yourself a copy of each of these texts, asap. And for now, use this excerpt to teach
yourself (and the stakeholders in your design) about local ecosystems.
Observation
If you did the homework assignment at the end of the PDC Free Intro Module, you spent time
observing a tree near your house, and looking for all of the relationships that tree has with its
surroundings.
This sort of exercise is something you can use, again and again, on every layer of your design.
Indeed, observation, while presented as the second step in our GOBRADIME design process, is truly
the first step in every action you will ever take as a designer. Look before you leap, right? Yes,
always.
Over the next several weeks, set aside a few minutes each day to cultivate your
observation skills. If you have a site for your permaculture project, spend time
observing every nook and cranny, making notes and taking notice of where systems
connect, intersect, and collide. If you don’t have a site, spend time observing your
neighborhood, exploring your larger community, and looking for options and
opportunities you hadn’t noticed.
Observing a willow tree using sight, taste, smell, hearing, touch, conscious mind
and subconscious mind. Artwork by KT Shepherd
Do you have a local agricultural extension service? That’s a great place to start.
Master Gardener program? Good too. Local permaculture people with long-term
sites in their care? Elderly organic farmers, well-educated policy makers, and/or
deeply committed stewards and scientists? Ideal. Find the people in your
community who are learning, doing, and embodying this work, and connect with
them. Help them with their projects. Be generous. And listen.
Hands-On
Go out for a walk, go the library, connect with local elders and mentors, and gather
as much information as you can.
You can have an organic garden, a composting toilet, a Hugelkultur, a heap of solar
panels, and a goat, and it still won’t be reaching its potential as “permaculture”
until those components come into relationship with each other, as a whole system.
Here's a mini-lecture:
Close your eyes and imagine your own "whole system." It's easy to let it
overwhelm you, to get lost in huge fantasies of what you will do...one day when
you win the lottery and buy a huge farm. Don't do that. Be here now, Sister bear!
Part of what makes permaculture so special is that it provides us with a tangible
framework around which to plan and implement whole systems designs in real life,
on any scale.
How do we do this, you ask?
A permaculture whole systems design can be simplified into four basic parts:
Patterns.
We use patterns in nature to guide us. We mimic them, we obey them, and we work with, rather than
against them. We develop our multi-phase plans based on patterns in our lives, and we design our
gardens based on patterns in our soil, climate, and water
cycles.
Principles.
Observing and adhering to natural patterns is one of the core principles of
permaculture, and there are several more, which we will learn about in the next few
weeks. Whenever we are stuck on a decision, struggling with how to prioritise
different aspects of a project, or dealing with interpersonal conflict, we rely on our
principles to guide us.
Process.
To provide a tangible structure to all of these visions and bold ideas, we need a
specific, measurable, actionable result-driven, and timebound process. That's where
GOBRADIME comes in. I use GOBRADIME in all of my permaculture work.
Place.
We're all connected to a place, and some of us are connected to several. No matter
what your goals are, you still have to sleep, eat, get warm, make friends. In its most
basic essense, every design comes back to place, and placement.
I wrote about GOBRADIME in my book, Food Not Lawns, which you now can
read for free! Here’s the direct link to the chapter that discusses GOBRADIME. Or,
if you want the quick-and-updated version, go here.
Step 2: For each item on your list, note which of the other components this item
could somehow connect to. Does your shower connect to your garden? How so?
Does your kitchen connect to your chicken coop? Where? And so on.
Step 3: Then, play with drawing it out. Don't worry about drawing maps to scale or
getting all the details! Think of it more like a game, and make a drawing of your
silly ultimate fantasy whole system design.
More stuff to do
Learn about GOBRADIME and see if you can use it for a tiny design project like, say,
reorganizing a project. Work through each of the steps and imagine how you could use the same
process for your whole system design.
Practice "systems thinking." What does that mean to you? Write about it, talk about it, try to
embody it as you move through your
day.
Come join us in our Facebook group and/or our independent #freepermaculture
forum.
Permaculture is, at its core, a design science, heavily focused on placement as a vector for environm
regeneration.
Permaculture, like any new skillset, cannot be learned in a day or a week, or even once a week for a
hours. You can learn a TON of amazing stuff that will have profound influence on your day to day q
life, but if you want to master the art of this powerful toolkit, you have to put in your 10,000 hours.
Sectors could be wind, water, weather...they can be economic, social, biological, or any combin
the above. Every sector has needs, resources, yields, wastes, and relationships that influence the
system.
Last week's "zones" drawing, now with some sectors added. Artwork by KT Shepherd
A work-zone is a sector, with uses, yields, and wastes. A children’s play area is a sector, and ha
and resources associated with it. The cold, moldy side of the basement is a sector (AND a micro
we'll get to that next week), with opportunities intrinsic (mushrooms, anyone?)
“Invisible structures” are mostly sectors as well, and so is your “inner landscape.”
Every site, no matter where you are, has a complex labyrinth of sectors to consider when makin
about your design. Sector analysis will help you identify microclimates and discover opportunit
weren’t obvious at first glance. The more you know, the better decisions you can make.
The potential for disaster happens when systems can not handle extremes or cumulative stress. O
week of limited spending may be a challenge, but a medical bill on top of long-term debt and st
poverty may force a family into homelessness. Water is essential for life, but the extremes of ei
drought or flood-causing torrential rain can cause havoc in both natural and human systems.
Designing land, the built environment, lifestyles, livelihoods and organisations to deal with extr
well as everyday conditions is essential for resilience. There are many ways in which permacult
design and practice supports resilience, but in order to do that it is important to understand what
extremes are most likely to have an impact. This is why careful observation and sector analysis
important for a successful project.
Sector analysis is a critical tool for visually representing observations about the “sectors” or ex
forces and elements that move through or otherwise influence your project. The sectors you rec
be related to effects on the site caused by climate, ecology, geology, topography and society. Fo
example sun paths, wind and rain patterns, invasive plants, wildlife, pollution, neighbours, area
fire threat, views and noise could all be recorded on your sector analysis layer.
Sectors are often represented as labelled wedges, arcs or arrows representing the origin and dire
the element. However, rocky areas, contaminated soil, boggy land, or areas of flood risk are bet
represented as location specific patches over your base map. Some uncontrollable issues such a
geological instability or limiting factors such as legal restrictions are harder to represent visually
best recorded in writing.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JfvyNc11Gkk
Sector analysis often represents the origin of different forces through arcs.
Part of developing Designer’s Mind is about making observations free of bias. The forces recor
sector analysis are neutral and can be both beneficial or harmful.
For example, knowing that dry summer winds come from the east helps identify the best place t
a laundry line or to hang produce for drying. At the same time, that drying wind will quickly ev
water from soil as well as dams or ponds. This information guides the placement of windbreak
or hedges on the eastern side to moderate the impact of the wind and reduce evaporation.
Used together with tools such as zone analysis, sector analysis helps guide the placement of com
so that they make best use of or mitigate the risks of that sector. Sector analysis influences whic
are placed where, but at the same time, zones influence the strategies used to respond to externa
In outer zones such as 3 or 4, lower cost, less energy intensive solutions such as windbreak plan
used to slow the wind. Closer to the home more intensive solutions such as walls or use of grey
might be used to protect water-demanding plants, animals and people from a drying wind.
You should make a sector analysis for your overarching project, and you should also make anal
sub-designs such as high intensity vegetable beds that include smaller scale microclimate influe
the impact of trees casting shade.
Working on sector analysis is a great way to review and incorporate the ideas from everything e
you’ve been seeing and learning. Your sector analysis should help you identify the risks, or maj
extremes that will threaten the longevity of your design projects whether they be fire, flood, dro
legal challenges.
(end of excerpt; if you want Pippa for your dedicated faculty mentor in the PDC, just check her
on your orientation form and she will personally help you create your design.)
Hands-On
Sector mapping will generally take way more than one sitting to finish, and sectors will change,
have to keep mapping! As such, it’s a thing to keep in mind, and in progress, as you move throu
weeks and months toward your whole-system design.
1. Make a bunch of extra copies of the base map you created last week. Or, if working digit
create a dozen or so empty layers.
2. Make a list of possible sectors influencing your site, and then label each layer; one for ea
sector.
3. Begin mapping your sectors, laying them over your basemap, and looking for intersectio
limitation, opportunities, and inspirations therein.
And yes, as mentioned above, don’t stop with just mapping the sun/wind/water sectors! Go dee
each fractal layer of the design, and look for repeated patterns. Recognize that sectors may have
effects in small areas, creating “microclimates,” and that those microclimates are bursting with
opportunity!
Permaculture is not the one true path. It's the vehicle, not the destination.
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