What is Permaculture
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| Collections | Must watchPermaculture and homesteadingVisual |
| Uploaded | 2018-07-29 |
What is the purpose of permaculture, and what is the role of the permaculturists? Let's find out.
The purpose of permaculture is to create something permanent. An edible forest that will recreate and change and be able to produce on its own everything you need without you meddling it. Meddling in it, sorry.
The purpose of the permaculturist is to assist nature, is to accelerate the process, is to accelerate the chaos of nature.
This is how my land looks like most of the places, because it's a former pasture.[1] And there is not much diversity and not a lot of things are growing there. And what I as a permaculturist have done is to, for example here, I have dropped a pile of rocks. It seems kind of random, don't you think? Why would he drop some rocks here? But as you can see, if I move away from the rocks, if I move closer, you see little saplings popping up all over the place. And even the grass is green here. It's not very green here, and this is green because underneath here we have rocks too.
Over here I've added wood, some toilet buckets dropped there, some soil on the top. And this shabby fence is creating shade. We don't have any trees here yet, or we have some going behind her, but we don't really have any trees able to cast shade here. So this artificial fence is doing the work as a fence.[2] So I as a permaculturist have helped nature, because now other things can grow behind her. Let's have a look what's going on over there.
If you remember the pasture area, this is how it looks on the other side of the fence.[3] And here we have... that's wool from sheep, then we have rotten wood collected from the forest.[4] And this area compared to... it's a little bit unfair to compare to this, because I have added a lot of stuff here as well. Over there you can see some wood. But still, in comparison, this is terrible. Had I done nothing behind the fence, that area would have looked just like the pasture area that I haven't had the time to meddle with yet.[5] And in some years there will be trees there too, but because I assisted nature, the trees are growing there already.[6] The diversity is already there, because I the permaculturist have assisted nature, and that's my role.
One thing to remember when it comes to mother nature is that chaos is good. Chaos is the norm. There are no rows of plants, of cabbage or whatever, growing in nature. They are scattered all over the place. It's chaos. And that chaos is the only thing in food production that is really sustainable.[7][8]
If you like this video, like this cloud behind me, give me a thumbs up, press like. If you don't like this video, press dislike.
The purpose of permaculture is to create something permanent. An edible forest that will recreate and change and be able to produce on its own everything you need without you meddling it. Meddling in it, sorry.
The purpose of the permaculturist is to assist nature, is to accelerate the process, is to accelerate the chaos of nature.
This is how my land looks like most of the places, because it's a former pasture.[1] And there is not much diversity and not a lot of things are growing there. And what I as a permaculturist have done is to, for example here, I have dropped a pile of rocks. It seems kind of random, don't you think? Why would he drop some rocks here? But as you can see, if I move away from the rocks, if I move closer, you see little saplings popping up all over the place. And even the grass is green here. It's not very green here, and this is green because underneath here we have rocks too.
Over here I've added wood, some toilet buckets dropped there, some soil on the top. And this shabby fence is creating shade. We don't have any trees here yet, or we have some going behind her, but we don't really have any trees able to cast shade here. So this artificial fence is doing the work as a fence.[2] So I as a permaculturist have helped nature, because now other things can grow behind her. Let's have a look what's going on over there.
If you remember the pasture area, this is how it looks on the other side of the fence.[3] And here we have... that's wool from sheep, then we have rotten wood collected from the forest.[4] And this area compared to... it's a little bit unfair to compare to this, because I have added a lot of stuff here as well. Over there you can see some wood. But still, in comparison, this is terrible. Had I done nothing behind the fence, that area would have looked just like the pasture area that I haven't had the time to meddle with yet.[5] And in some years there will be trees there too, but because I assisted nature, the trees are growing there already.[6] The diversity is already there, because I the permaculturist have assisted nature, and that's my role.
One thing to remember when it comes to mother nature is that chaos is good. Chaos is the norm. There are no rows of plants, of cabbage or whatever, growing in nature. They are scattered all over the place. It's chaos. And that chaos is the only thing in food production that is really sustainable.[7][8]
If you like this video, like this cloud behind me, give me a thumbs up, press like. If you don't like this video, press dislike.
- Yes, after 4-5 weeks of drought.
- As a TREE.
- Yes, after 4-5 weeks of drough.
- It's still kind of green here. Unlike in the "pasture" area.
- Well, I have had the time to meddle a bit, but very little.
- "behind the fence"
- This is NOT a forest. This is a field of trees. Barely anything else grows here. Only these planted trees.
- If it's not sustainable, then it is DESTRUCTIVE. STOP SAWING OFF THE BRANCH YOU SIT ON!