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Wednesday 6 June 2012

PERMACULTURE COURSE, a review. and some practical applications


I am still overwhelmed by the emotions and memories of the Permaculture Design Course which I have recently attended in Scagnello, Piemonte about 200km West of where we live.  There is only one thing I can say if ever any of you had ever considered taking the course: DO IT!

I have learned so much.  There was of course the course itself and many things weren't that new to me, you can find much of it on-line or in books.  It did help organise things in my head though and I realised that many things I was doing were already permaculture concepts without actually realising I was doing it. There is still much more to learn and the course really is just a beginning.  Often time restrictions didn't allow to get as deep into some subjects as I would have whished.

But the most amazing part of the course was meeting and becoming friends with so may inspiring and like-minded people and that will stay with me for the rest of my life:


Above just the group who chose to camp on the Permaculture Test Site, but each and everyone of the 25 particpants was a uniquely talented, positive and critical thinking person with a real vision for the future, a harmonious future.  We have connected as group like I have rarely experienced in any walk of life and we will remain a true network and some of the friendships forged I know will last a lifetime.  For a few more impressions have a look at the photos on the Italian Permaculture site and have a read (both in Italian and English) of this beautifully written e-mail a few days after the course by Andrea (also known as Mayemi).

Anyway, as I'm slowly descending back to planet Earth I have some catching up to do having been away for 2 weeks, so time to apply some of newly learned skills into practice.  Yesterday we passed another bunch of old doors on a skip on the way to our land, something I had been on the look out for for some time.  Took them straight to the land to build another raised bed on the second terrace along the same lines as the one we had already built on the first terrace and I applied several permaculture principles in its design.

The first principle we applied is that of zoning, where your house is zone 0, the area immediately outside your home is zone 1, containing the kitchen garden and the highest maintenance part of the garden, going all the way out to zone 5, which is the way and beyond, where you contemplate nature and forage.  Previously we didn't really have a zone 0 on our land, as we didn't have any shelter there, but zone 1 was centred around the 5th terrace, where initially we had the only water access, there was the tool shed, a heavy marble table and a barbecue.  We placed a small herb garden there too.

Now the tool shed has finally collapsed to have been replaced by the caravan which sits at the very top of the property.  Also thanks to the plumbing skills of our friend Stephen, we now have a second and third water connection, near the caravan.  So when our last helpers, Becky and Nick suggested moving the rest of the stuff from terrace 5 to terrace 2, where they built us a pizza oven, it made perfect sense to make this our new zone 1.  The raised beds are going to have the most labour intensive crops growing in them, so it makes sense having them on terrace 1 and 2, which is now the area we spend most time in.

This is what we did for building the raised bed:  We put the doors upright against the back of the terrace like this leaving a little bit of a gap:


In the background you can see the BBQ, table and solar dehydrator and above you can just make out the caravan.  Next I cut into the side of the terrace to level things and take some of the topsoil off the side.  There is a surprising amount of topsoil on those vertical bits, which is fed from some oak trees above.


Incidentally, talking about vertical bits, that's another thing permaculture teaches us: there are no problems, just challenges.  I've always looked at the steep gradient of our land as a problem, but looking at it from another viewpoint: On paper my land consists of about 2,000 sqm.  That presumably is calculated on the horizontal parts.  However having an average gradient of 40% that means I have an additional 700sqm of vertical land.  You might not think this to be very useful, but there are some trees growing on the vertical areas, as well as many edible herbs and not to forget, heaps of biomass, which when cut feeds the soil below on the horizontal bits!

Anyway, back to the raised bed: next I threw some of the aforemntioned biomass, which we had cut earlier a bit fiurther up the slope and filled it in to provide nutrient and build up some soil.


..and finally, also in the interest of building soil and fertility we added some donkey manure on top:


...kindly donated to us by Pietro, the donkey (not to be confused with any permaculture teachers I may have met in the recent past...)

Another principle of permaculture is to have multiple functions for each element and this raised bed certainly complies with that.
  • It is soil building as I am adding plenty of organic matter and we had lost so much topsoil during the Christmas 2010 landslides.  
  • It prevents soil compaction.  Previously I had just used the whole width of the terrace, which meant I had to walk straight through the beds and turning our heavy clay soil into hard pan resulting in poor yields.  So although I have decreased the actual growing area I am expecting a higher yield.  
  • The new raised bed will slow and store water.  Water running off the vertical side of the terrace will first hit the fertile soil of the raised bed.  The rich soil will be much better at absorbing the excess water, unlike the hard clay surface which was the previous feature of this terrace.
  • This in turn will also prevent erosion and reduce the chance of landslides.
  • Being a raised bed means I don't have to bend over quite so much when working the bed, making work lighter.  I'm not getting any younger you know!
You're starting to get the picture.  I shall be boring you guys to death with all that permaculture stuff in my head.

4 comments:

chaiselongue1 said...

Those terraces do look like challenges! But you have great helpers and lots of new ideas. Yes, of course, you can use my Italian Bugloss photo in your book - email me, chaiselongue [at] gmx.fr if you'd like a higher resolution copy.

Ruth Trowbridge said...

Looking good!! Who's the king of the hill now, wonderful. Peace

Ruth Trowbridge said...

Looking Good!! Wonderful to see you refreshed and empowered! Peace

LindyLouMac said...

Not boring interesting!