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Hello! Thank you for creating this community. I hope these sort of text discussion posts are okay.

I'd like to know - how do people here practice permaculture? What sort of habits have you created? What sources do you learn from?

I'm a suburb-bound person who is constantly trying to bring more permaculture practices into my life, and spaces that show me what others are doing really help.

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[-] drnaturo@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

I've been stealthily replacing the ornamental plants in my gated community here with edible plants of similar size so noone notices. Pineapple tops, pomegranate bushes, strawberry groundcovering, papaya stalks, bananas, baby orange and mandarin trees, etc. Moringa is great too, but I know the drumsticks on those things will litter the property, so I had to plant those just outside the property so nobody gets ticked off at the mess.

[-] NanoTriffid@lemmy.world 0 points 1 year ago

I also have a small patch to work with and it is so rewarding. I started reading about permaculture because I hated the idea of added npk fertilizers to make plants grow. It felt so unintuitive and daunting to me.

The moment I read about dynamic accumulation, soil life cycles and guilds it was like a bomb went off in my head. I was so excited I had to read everything I could. I love the idea of a mostly closed cycle and reusing as much of what the garden and my kitchen waste could provide.

[-] verity_kindle@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Same with me! Project Gutenberg has so many gardening e-books about closed cycle farming, they just called it something else in the 1860s🤯

[-] troelsgk@lemmy.sdf.org 1 points 1 year ago

That is extremely interesting! Do you have a few examples of what to look for?

[-] verity_kindle@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

"Ten Acres Enough" by Edmund Morris is excellent for how to select and develop a small amount of land for a commercial orchard as well as a homestead. It was written in the 1860s, I keep coming back to it for advice on homesteading, setting up outbuildings and long-term, closed-cycle farming. Chickens, dairy, orchard, cash crops- he covers it. It's also an enjoyable read in and of itself. "Compost Everything: The Good Guide to Extreme Composting" by David the Good, that's his nom de plume, available to buy, worth the money. Another Gutenberg treasure: "Dry-Farming, a System of Agriculture for Countries a Low Rainfall" by John Andreas Widtsoe. This is a must-have from 1910, even if you don't happen to live in a area with low rainfall. I had no idea how a rainfall or flooding creek causes erosion and why some soils wash away and others don't. He explains in plain English how to fortify your soil against excessive erosion, no matter what type of soil you have. Enjoyable read and will change the way you look at the soil outside your window, wherever you live. "Crops and Methods for Soil Improvement" by Alva Agee, more technical, but easy to understand for the layman.

"Farmers of Forty Centuries; Or, Permanent Agriculture in China, Korea and Japan" by F.H. King. This is the Bible of closed-cycle farming to feed millions of people on tiny patches of land without exhausting the soil and water resources. F.H. King traveled on foot and by horse-drawn vehicle through these countries for decades, he listened to the lessons offered by peasant sharecroppers, fish farmers, poultry raisers and orchardists through translators. It's also a really fascinating travelogue. I keep coming back to this one whenever I get discouraged with a project, i.e., fruit trees that don't seem like the pH of my two acres of old pasture. Those farmers had much less and never gave up.

this post was submitted on 17 Jun 2023
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