Showing posts with label Lillie House Permaculture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lillie House Permaculture. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 6, 2018

Syntropic Permaculture in Temperate Climates

("Syntropy" at Lillie House.)

Or Syntropic Agriculture and Temperate Climate Permaculture Design

Syntropic Farming is a farming revolution grown out of Brazil and made famous by Ernst Goetsch and the Life in Syntropy short documentary. Syntropic Farming seeks to cultivate resilient ecosystems that are abundant, financially viable and heal abused land.

- Ernst Goetsch, creator  of Syntropic Farming

Key points in this article:
- Syntropic Agriculture is trendy new growing system, but what distinguishes it? 
- What are the key techniques and novel features of Syntropic Agriculture?
- Can it be put to use in temperate climates? 

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If like me, you're keen on having a human-habitable biosphere on planet earth in the coming decades, then the most exciting technological leap of the last few decades has been the rapid wide-ranging experimentation occuring at the intersection of sustainable food systems and regenerating functioning ecologies. With the current agriculture system being probably the single largest driver of climate change, mass extinction, ocean dead zones, community disruption, and a whole host of other problems, this constant churning synthesis of new "systems" of sustainable growing is very hopeful. It can also be difficult and a bit bewildering to keep up with. 




After a break-through success with the documentary Life in Syntropy, one new system called "syntropic agriculture" (S.A.) or "syntropic farming" has quickly grown in popularity. Like many sustainable Ag trends, this system, the work of Ernst Goetsch is mix of good applied ecological insight, practicality, poetry, philosophy, and just enough nuttiness to make it spiritually fulfilling to engage with, and I absolutely love it. It is a very similar system to what we use at Lillie House, and recommend to our students and clients. Like sustainable agriculture leaders before him, Steiner, Fukuoka, Dr. Hankyu Cho, Mollison, etc. Goetsch is an abundant producer of quotable quotes.

The laws (of nature) are given, it isn’t up to us to create or modify any of them. We need to act in a beneficial way for all participants, for all the affected ones, in order to be considered useful and welcomed beings in the system”  -Ernst Goetsch


And while one should take any farming poetical philosophy with a grain of salt, this shouldn't be viewed as a limitation. Our relationship with the land, food and ecosystems is utterly sacred, perhaps our most sacred thing, and any practical approach to growing food must recognize that. It is modern "scientific" agriculture's failure to recognize that intuitive spiritual component, our profound human responsibility for other species and the health of the systems we inhabit, which is the cause of our current multi-faceted crisis.We actually need an abundance of farm philosophers to appeal to every sensibility if we are to have any hope of salvaging our biosphere. In the case of Goetsch, he has created a vocabulary that synthesizes some of the language and vocabulary of modern ecology and agroecology into poetry and platitude in a charming way, though some critics allege that it risks the appearance of pseudoscience. 


(Image via this excellent article from Agenda Goetch.)

Perhaps one of the biggest innovations of Syntropic Agriculture is how it has transcended poetry alone, and has become famous largely due to its beautiful use of film and photography to capture and convey the importance of regenerating the land, and rekindling the human relationship with nature.

Since syntropic agriculture (S.A.) utilizes design, tree crops, no-till, and mulch, many are wondering how this new system relates and compares to Permaculture, whether it works, and whether we in temperate climates can put this tropical system to work in our climates (such as in this article from Propagate which posses some thoughts  on the question.) On this last note, I have seen it frequently stated temperate farmers can "simply substitute apples for tropical tree crops" to make syntropic agriculture work. I feel I can say with a great deal of certainty that in many if not most temperate climates, that simplistic advice would yield very poor results. Yet, at Lillie house we have adapted some traditional patterns that are very similar to those used in syntropic farming, and believe these could be put to use very effectively in most temperate climate situations. 

 In this article, we'll look at the basic "active ingredients" of syntropic agriculture, its relationship to Permaculture Design, and how it could be adapted effectively to temperate climates from a Permaculture perspective. In other words, we'll attempt to develop some guidelines for a Syntropic Temperate Climate Permaculture, for those looking to integrate S.A.'s key features into broader designs. 

Syntropic Agriculture and Permaculture Design: Syntropic Permaculture? 

While Syntropic Agriculture seeks to create resilient agro-ecologies, Permaculture Design is a broader design system for human habitats, including agro-ecologies. Permaculture Design proposes a general design process for our lives, and the smart Permaculture Designer might look into systems like natural farming, Korean Natural Farming, or Syntropic Agriculture to see if they get us where we want to go. Permaculture itself does not actually propose any specific type of growing system or set of techniques, only this process for contemplating and deciding which might be useful in a given context. This system of design typically works "from patterns to details," so we might begin this discussion by observing and analyzing Syntropic Agriculture as a set of "patterns" or "active indgredients" that could help us meet our design objectives. 

Key Features of Syntropic Agriculture

To get a better understanding of Syntropic Agriculture, let's take a look at its key techniques, or "active ingredients." If you're familiar with Permaculture, I invite you to think about how these patterns relate to those common to that system before I elaborate on the topic below.

Syntropy: To begin with, the namesake principle of Syntropic Agriculture is, of course, "syntropy." Readers of Lillie House will know that the key feature we discuss in our particular school of Permaculture is Negentropy, or negative entropy. Syntropy is another proposed term for the same phenomenon. This refers to the observation that while man-made systems like cars exhibit "entropy," losing energy over time and reverting to chaos or less useful states, natural systems of enough complexity appear to "catch and store" energy, rather than losing it, growing more organized, more diverse,  resilient, abundant and useful over time. This is especially seen in ecosysems in the process of "ecological succession," where degraded ecologies (such as a clearcut forest) grow in complexity over time (returning back to a forest after going through stages of grassland, shrubbery, and young forest.) Syntropic Agriculture, like any good Permaculture, seeks to work with this process and put the power of negative entropy to use. And while Mollisonian Permaculture included design recommendations for percentages of canopy in a system that S.A. lacks, it shares the final goal: a rich, functional agroforest system dominated by trees. 

Heavy Pruning: The single most characteristic method S.A. uses to work with succession is frequent heavy pruning for use as mulch, which accelerates the amount of carbon and biomass produced by the ecosystem. In Permaculture and Regenerative Ag circles this would be called "chop and drop." Certain trees are planted specificially for the purpose of cutting to provide fertilizer. This is reflected in many common traditional patterns frequntly used in permaculture designs, including many traditional temperate climate systems, as we'll see below.  

In Syntropic Farming, we work the design aiming to arrange different species all the way from the implementation of the system and continuing at each step in the conduction of our plantations, managing them to produce their own fertilizer. For that purpose, we plant trees, grasses, and herbs in high density. They should share the characteristic of vigorous regrowth after pruning. A good farmer manages them accordingly. The periodic pruning results – in addition to the supply of light for our crops – in organic matter in large quantities which, on top of the soil, create a prosperous life in it and, indirectly, fertilize our plants.

-Ernst Goetsch
Deep mulch Once these trees are cut, they are applied as deep mulch, both chipped and as whole, cut logs. In some cases, this would appear to be a large labor and energy input. However, much could also be said for the research-based value of deep mulches and "nurse logs." We'll explore this more later.

Minimal mechanical tools necessary. S.A.seeks to reduce the need for mechanical tools. This is probably a goal for many temperate climate Permaculturists, so it will be interesting to see if S.A. offers economically viable tools that can be adapted.

High density and diversity. Simple enough, dense polyculture increases the health and productivity of the system. This is a key feature of our systems at Lillie House and probably have almost universal application. 

Article on using the density and diversity of the French Intensive system.

Recipes, or "Consortia" (Designed plant communities.)  "One of the characteristics of Syntropic Farming is the use of consortia of plants in high diversity and density. From the initial moment of planting, the goal is to co-create agroecosystems similar to the original ecosystems of each place, both in its form, as in its function and dynamics" - Dayana Adrane. In Permaculture, we refer to these as "guilds," and offer some more concrete tools for evaluating the roles of plants within designed plant communities.

Differences in a temperate climate

With these key features, which have a good research basis and are likely to be effective, it's easy to understand why Syntropic Agriculture works. But does it work in a temperate climate? Yes, these same patterns are proven to have value in temperate climates as well, though there are big differences and some conceptual barriers to making it work effectively and economically. 

The first is simply that we're working with entirely different crops. We will  not be growing "consortia" including bananas and shade-grown cocoa will not be our primary cash crop. However, given that all 6 of our most valuable crops per acre in Michigan this year (as well as a plethora of valuable runner-cups) are all shade-grown forest crops, so with careful crop choice we should be able to create agroecologies that are profitable even in later stages of succession. And while apples would be unlikely to work well, be healthy or economically viable, we actually have a wide range of options to build valuable systems that actually would work well. These would depend largely on what's native and valuable to each region, but in North America might include high-value crops like paw paw, serviceberry, maple, and persimmon. 

And while in the tropics you can create a local market "vegetable" CSA with mostly tree crops like avocados, breadfruit, jackfruit, and plantains, and still more vegetables can be grown in the understory, in temperate climates we have few calorie tree crops and less light to feed an understory layer. These are all features we could design around, and there are traditional systems that evolved in temperate climates to meet those needs.

Beyond crop choice, everything moves moves more slowly in temperate climates. Succession is slower. Decomposition is slower. Nutrient loss and cycling in the soil is slower. Plant growth is slower. We can't just plant trees and expect them to be significant sources of mulch in one year. We can't just chop trees and expect them to have completely broken down in a matter of months. But because growth is slower, we also do not need to. We have less need to store fertility in duff, as less is needed, and it more easily accumulates in the soil. So, overall, there needs to be a much greater emphasis on early succession in temperate climate systems than in the tropics. Food forests need to become as valuable as possible as early as possible, or they are likely to fail or be seen as a burden. 

A final major difference is that sun light and photosynthesis are much more abundant in tropical climates. Many crops can be grown in the understory, even with a fairly dense canopy. In temperate climates, if we want to grow any annual crops, we have to plan for more light infiltration. And this also means that there's going to be more competition for resources in temperate systems, so it will be more important to maximize cooperation and avoid elements like interplanting with grasses that may strip crops of needed nitrogen.

Beyond those major differences, there are many small differences that add up. Disease is managed quite differently. Apples, could not take the kind of pruning recommended in syntropic agriculture, and poorly pruned trees could become a vector for disease that could impact the productivity of a whole system. Pests cycles respond differently as well, due to the cold winter season. 

So overall, there's no direct correlation for importing syntropic agriculture in a simplified form to temperate climates.  

But since the best Permaculture utilizes research-based and proven patterns, let's transpose some of the active ingredients and techniques of Syntropic Agriculture into "patterns" that we can apply in a design, picking patterns that are proven to work well in temperate climates. 

Recommended Temperate Climate Patterns for Syntropic Permaculture

These are patterns that make up the basis of our growing system at Lillie House, are research-based and very comparable to the work of Ernst Goetsch, as reported in his published works.  Overall, I love systems that use trees very densely to control the land, prevent weeds and pest problems, build fast biodiversity, carbon and fertility, and provide ample mulch. I think the following patterns, adapted from Syntropic Agriculture could be valuable to almost all garden and farm systems at any scale. I especially see potential as an alternative to Regenerative Agriculture for managing broad acreage in economically viable ways that more closely resemble the traditional, evolved systems of the temperate climates. Goetch used S.A. to manage large acreage even with the tropical growth rate of Brazil. Broad-acre Permaculturists could put S.A. inspired techniquest to work to create profitable land management systems that more closely resemble the designs of Mollisonian Permaculture, the mosaic woodland and agriforest systems of Europe and Japan. To me, these would appear to have some built-in expectations for function and profitability, and would be a new niche for intrepid broad-acre Permaculturists. 

Slashmulch: S.A. has pioneered the idea of Working with grasses as a valuable element in an ecological system, as opposed to seeing them as a major weed. This is what we have done in our slashmulch systems at Lillie House. Slashmulch has been considered to be one of the most sustainable forms of agriculture ever created by humans. However, grass interplantings would be very difficult to use with vegetable crops in temperate climates due to competition for nitrogen. 


(Slashmulch 3 Sisters planted without tilling, sheet-mulching or removal of lawn.)

Chop and Drop: In Permaculture, this is the technique of heavy pruning plants and weeds to create mulch in site. Also used in S.A.

High Diversity and Density: Techniques of using high diversity and density are the backbone of our system at Lillie House, as well as in Bio-Intensive and French Intensive gardening. To learn more about how we employ them in vegetable gardening visit: Bio-Intensive Permaculture

Polyculture and Guilds: These are the Permaculture equivilents of "consortia" or recipes in S.A. 

Miyawaki technique: A research-based forestry technique using high diversity and density. In a productive system, some of this density can be used to "chop and drop" as the system matures, similar to S.A. In an S.A. inspired system, many of these trees would be "sacrificial," being cut for mulch as the system develops. We have put that technique to good use at Lillie House. 

Hedgerows are another proven, long-evolved temperate climate system that has been used for creating mulch, fertility, diversity and biomass. In Permaculture and Bio-Intensive systems, these are often used to create mulch through frequent pruning. This is a technique we use at Lillie House.  

Mosaic Woodland landscapes: This is a tradition agriforestry style of Temperate Europe and Asia which maximizes sun infiltration into annual crop systems while providing biomass, fertility, and biodiversity services. To explore such systems, visit our Pinboard gallery on Traditional Forest Garden Systems

Sun-traps designs place the tallest trees to the north, and shorter ones to the south, so as to maximize sun infiltration. Horse-shoe shapes may be used to create microclimates and maximize annual and perennial vegetable production. Sun trap design could be key in adapting Syntropic Agriculture to Temperate Climates. Sun trap design also more closely resembles traditional systems, as well as many of the tropical systems of Ernst Goetsch than does conventional Regenerative Agriculture. 

Nurse trees (also sacrificial trees) and nurse plants are a research-based approach that are perhaps an under-utilized pattern in many Permaculture systems. This is a technique of planting support trees to help nurture and establish target crop plants. They are a major feature at Lillie House that we use in areas where we want to reduce maintenance. I especially enjoy working with catalpas as nurse plants, as they establish easily even on sandy or degraded soils, provide ample mass, cut easily, and produce large shady leaves. They may also improve soil carbon via an interaction with the catalpa worm. 

Nurse logs have been found in research to be nearly as effective as woodchip mulch in conserving water and promoting growth. Nurse logs are also energy efficient, as they do not have to be chipped to be used. It is not necessary to neatly cut logs as in S.A. systems for them to be effective. In temperate climates they may last longer and work well as bed or path edging. 

Deep mulches area always welcome in any system in any climate. 

Matching mulch to crop and succession is perhaps more necessary in temperate climates, where nutrients are stored longer in the soil and plants grow less rapidly. We probably have more to gain by emulating natural ecologies, selecting woody mulches for tree systems for example, and grassy mulches for vegetables which evolved in grassland systems. 


(Tree-based fertility system at Lillie House.)

Implementation Process

Aside from knowing a list of techniques and patterns one can utilize for a growing system, to be practical, one must also have an idea of implementation and establishment. 

On smaller acreage, it's possible to just integrate some of these patterns into the existing landscape or garden system. Plan and develop useful hedgerows and forest garden areas around the perimeter of growing areas in a suntrap configuration. Possibly add sacrificial trees like catalpa. Work with invasives like autumn olive as chop and drop mulch. Start using nurse logs and deep mulch in the garden. Explore bio-intensive gardening and polyculture interplantings. Using these patterns, you will arrive at a system with much of the form and function of tropical S.A. systems, or what we has worked very well for us at Lillie House. 

On larger acreage, more thought towards process and implementation is necessary, and will depend greatly upon what the cash-flow needs are, what priorities and goals are, who will harvest and how. But the basics will involve selecting high-value crop plants that can be sown and established in successions. A final system design would probably include hedgerows, Miyawaki type plantings, paddocks, and forest gardens, as well as periodic clearings for annual cropping. Succession will move from an initial disturbance with annual maincrops, through phases of "slashmulch" using perennials as mulch, through old field and shrubland, choosing crops and sacrificials as they arrive, until the final stable configuration is arrived at. This might be in rows such as with Regeneartive Ag. or it might be in sun-trap designs of openings as in mosaic woodland patterns.  

Ultimately, I expect experimentation with Syntropic Agriculture patterns is likely to lead to novel profitable income models in temperate climates that rapidly regenerate ecosystems as well. If you're working on that project, I'd like to hear about what you're doing. 

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Resrouces:
1. Natural Recovery of Species in Agroforestry and in Soil Recovery, Ernest Goetsch, Fazenda TrĂªs Colinas Agrosilvicultura Ltda. 45436 Pirai do Norte Bahia, Brazil, August 1992 http://www.agrofloresta.net/static/artigos/agroforestry_1992_gotsch.pdf
2. Agendagotsch.com
3. Life in Sytrnopy

Thursday, October 1, 2015

About Lillie House


Lillie House is a 1-acre Permaculture Homestead in Kalamazoo, Michigan. Here, we work to live well, care for the earth, care for people, and respect natural limits.

The old rules and "road maps" for life just weren't working for us, in fact, it felt like they were working against us. I'm not sure they actually work for anyone anymore. We're looking for a better, healthier, more joyful way of living, with more freedom and - most importantly - more peace of mind. 

We're finding it with Permaculture, Forest Gardening, community, and "Restoration." A sense of place. Meaningful work. We don't always get it right, but we've come a long, long way. "Two steps forward and one step back" gets you further than never taking that first step. And if you're stylish and clever you can make those steps into a groovy little dance. Maybe get your own internet meme. 

We want Lillie House to be a "model site" for real people with real problems and real goals. Our path needs to be "replicable" to as many people as possible. Permaculture for people, not "super heroes." 

So we need to build our lives on a real, live human scale and budget. No scammy funding schemes. No money from heaven. No slave labor. No "blue sky budgets" or big savings accounts. We weren't funded by a "Kickstarter" campaign or a grant from the Richy Rich Foundation. You won't see any of the "shiny flashy dazzling" over-sized, over-designed, over-complicated "Permaculture" features that sell books and look impressive on tours, but never pay for themselves in the real world. 

If it doesn't pay for itself, we can't afford it. If it doesn't work, it doesn't last. If it ain't for real, it ain't here. 

And each step has to give us LESS WORK, not more, and MORE FREEDOM, not less. We're no longer willing to work ourselves to death over the "big flashy" stuff - that wouldn't be "people care" and it wouldn't be "Permaculture." 

And it has to be fun. Because (as Bill Mollison used to say) "if you're not having fun, you're not doing it right." 

Our Gardens:
The "Home Garden" or "forest garden" is as old as man, probably older, a basic part of the human experience. Some anthropologists are calling it "the oldest human land use" and we're discovering they were a nearly universal adaptation across continents and cultures. 



Our garden is designed to be a beautiful, restorative place, the ultimate home health-food store, our main source of food, medicine and fuel, as well as an important source of income. It's been planned using tools like One Circle Garden to provide a diverse diet, and give us the security of growing a full-year's supply of nutritional and caloric needs. It's a landscape where we feel secure and cared for, where our needs will be met. 

And it's a boon, not a burden. It's been designed to be maintained by a couple people on just an average of 2-4 hours of work a week, instead of a flock of woofers and under-paid interns toiling long hours.  

To accomplish this goal, we've discovered a few very successful patterns:

Planning for Success: This is first on our list because it's the most important advice we ever learned. We didn't just plant things because we liked them or use our instincts about how many. We didn't just pack in as many "goodies" as we could.

We researched, found current best practices, a variety of perspectives, and historical models. And then did the math to "right size" our gardens. Our "swales" are sized to catch the right amount of water, no more, no less. We calculated the amount of fruit and produce we wanted to have and created a plant list to meet those goals. Same with bed space, we've got exactly what we need, and recognize that any more would be a burden. We respected that the "law of diminishing marginal utility" certainly applies to a garden. 




Food Forest Gardens: Notice how nobody ever has to weed or fertilize a natural forest? Food forests are gardens that work with nature, rather than against, and employ plants and other natural allies to do work like weeding, fertilizing, and mulching, so that you don't have to. They grow a very diverse set of plants in many layers that mimic a natural forest. Food forest gardens can be designed to be extremely low maintenance and yet still very productive.  




The Front Yard Jardin de Cure. This is one of the historic traditional "food forest garden" of France. It combines beauty and "neatness" of formal beds with the ease and productivity of "wild plantings." 




Polycultures: Polyculture is an approach of growing many plants together like an ecosystem, as opposed to one crop all alone. We've been experimenting heavily with polycultures including the famous Ianto Evans Polyculture and "guilds" of companion plants that work together like a team. 




Ecological Modeling: We've studied productive wild plant systems in the area and copied their spacing and species distribution. These systems are highly productive with no human interference. We want our garden to work like that. 




Edible Hedgerows: Another ancient form of "forest garden." Ours are designed like some historic models from Europe. 




Espalier, Edible Fence: Fruit trees can be trained to make an edible fence. The trees are more productive, healthier and grow slower so they require less maintenance. 

No-Dig Gardens: Digging or "tilling" the soil destroys soil diversity, fertility and health. It wastes energy. It's also a bummer. Who wants to work that hard? Most of our gardens have never been dug. Those that have were dug only one time. 




Accessible Design: We use a system of permanent paths and "work places" that are "right sized" to maximize productivity and minimize maintenance. Permanent paths mean we never have to dig our no-dig beds, because we're not compacting the soil.  

Redundant Water Wise Systems: We've planned our garden with a multi-layered strategy for being water wise. We've got swales and passive swales, and natural water-collection reservoirs to catch and store water where our plants can use it. We have a few "Hugelkulture beds," though the "jury's still out" on whether they're worth the work. A better approach is an engineered system of mulching and plant spacings to minimize water use. We're building good soils, which hold water naturally. And we've even got things like rain barrels and soaker hoses, but with the other systems, we usually don't end up even putting them out! If you need those complicated systems, you got the design wrong. 




A Diverse Plant Collection: This is one of the keys of garden utility, ease of maintenance, beauty and health. Diversity has been found to increase the health of ecosystems and individual plants, and it works in gardens as much as wild-lands. We're nearing 300 species of useful, edible, medicinal plants. That also enhances OUR health by providing a very diverse set of nutrients and phytochemical. 

An Emerging "Coppice and Standard" lot: Coppice lots are a traditional land use that provides great wildlife habitat, a variety of harvests and wood for crafts and fuel in a way that is not just carbon-neutral, but carbon negative, sequestering more carbon in the earth than is released through burning.

Winter Gardens: Greenhouses and hoophouses maybe necessary, but for most people they are costly, difficult to maintain, and a pain to irrigate and grow in. We're collecting a variety of "greens" that are available even in Michigan's cold climate winter without any protection other than snow cover. Meanwhile, we'll be converting our attached porches into more permanent and easier-to-maintain winter growing space. 

Simple Composting Systems: Nothing expensive. just worm farms, trench composing, sheet composting, mushroom composting, rabbit litter, "chop and drop" composting in place, and a good old fashioned "hot" pile. There are many ways to turn waste into "black gold." The more you use, the easier things will be. The simpler, the better. 

Water Garden Systems. We're just starting to work on these. Aquatic systems are among the most productive. Water Gardens put that fact to work for us. They're purdy, too. 





Our Home:
Lillie House is an 1840s Victorian house on a "less-than one acre" site in Kalamazoo's urban core. 

We focus on a "restoration" rather than "renovation" approach to maintaining our home, because we appreciate the "embodied energy" and evolved functionality and beauty of old homes. We're not convinced that modern "high energy" disposable materials that were "designed for the dump" are somehow "better" than hand-made materials that are almost endlessly maintainable. 




We work with natural materials when possible and "repair instead of replace" durable assets like our steel gutters, antique windows, antique sinks, heritage floors, plaster walls, and so on. 



(Restored and restabilized natural lime plaster.)

We're "formalizing" an informal "energy action plan" that starts with being conscientious and investing in the Highest Return on Investment items first, to save us money and help us pay for more energy investments. Positive feedback loops are even better than Fruit Loops, which are a delicious part of a balanced breakfast. 

Already Lillie House is pretty consistently in the top 10% most energy efficient homes in the city. 


Our Work:
We're a "community-based business" that focuses on products, tools and programs that grow the health, happiness and freedom of our community members by allowing them to "catch and store" life-enhancing energies through good design, and accumulate real wealth in assets like "food forest gardens," "home health-food gardens," edible hedgerows, and efficient home features. We want to help you turn your home and landscape into a great support system to meet your needs, as well as your own personal "dream vacation" resort. 

We also grow food, valuable plants, medicinal herbs, fiber and fuel. We make a variety of products from what we grow and forage. We share our knowledge and experience with design, Permaculture, wildcrafting, restoration and Forest Gardening. We organize events to build community and share knowledge. We work to restore the "gift economy" when we can, by giving freely from a spirit of abundance. 

(Photo courtesy of PJ Chmiel)

We enjoy connecting with people sharing our work, dreams and goals. The more connections we make, the stronger and more resilient we become.







Friday, August 14, 2015

Reviving the Gift Economy


(As a reminder, we will be having a free tour this Sunday at 9:00 AM, with a focus on "Water Wise Forest Gardening." For information, please see www.VanKalPermaculture.org) 

When we’re two or three years old, the very first thing we are taught is to give. In our families, we are shown how to give. We learn that when we receive something that we really cherish and we really care about, that it is the first thing we should give up, because our community is to be cherished on that level. Our people and our land is be cherished on that level. And if we don’t know how to give like that, we are poor. We are in poverty. We might hoard all the things that we think our family or our business needs, but we are poor.

~Jeanette Armstrong, explaining the gift economy of her tribe, the Sylix People of Brittish Colombia 


Kim and I have recently been letting people know that we would like to do more Permaculture consultation and design work, as well as possibly taking on some project management and installation jobs. Almost immediately, folks started getting in touch with us because they want to do something and Permaculture lets them actively engage in building a better world, by starting right outside their front door. It is inspiring to meet people who want to start taking responsibility for meeting their needs in more ethical ways by reconnecting and cooperating with nature. It's a true privilege to help them out when I can. 

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One thing we can all do to build a saner, kinder world is give more. I'm convinced of that. 

Climate change, soil depletion, poverty, oppression, war, environmental degredation, ecosystem collapse, mass extinctions, unemployment, cancer, heart disease--none of these are problems. 

It's vitally important that we understand that. These are all symptoms of one underlying problem: the exploitive system we use to meet our needs is broken and it's literally killing us. 

But we can't help but feed and support this broken system every day simply by meeting our needs through it. This system causes us to do harm each time we buy shoes, or drive to the grocery store. And this system is a "hungry ghost," with an endless appitite, demanding more and more of us each year. 

This system devours the things we used to do for each other freely, simply because we were human and we could, and it replaces these "gifts" with "goods and services." Rapidly, the daily acts that used to make up our culture are converted into "economic transactions" and added to the "formal economy," where they feed the beast, and cause us to do eachother violence. 

So whenever we find ways to meet our needs outside this formal economy we starve the beast, and strike right to the heart of the true problem, through a garden, or by collecting rain water, by exchanging services with a neighbor, or by generously receiving a gift. And while the beast grows ever weaker and less able to meet our needs, in these ways we can build a new, healthy economy together, right underneath the old failing one. 

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At Lillie House we have begun, very clumsily, to open ourselves to the spirit of giving freely when we're able, and to accept trades and exchanges whenever possible. For me, this seems especially important to information and basic consultation. If I honestly believe I've learned information that can change your life, improve your health and make you happier--and I do believe this--then what kind of jerk would I be to withhold that from people who couldn't afford to pay me? So, along with our friend PJ, we have made our classes and tours free for anyone to attend, and we give out a large amount of free information and advice at these. Plants and seeds are made available for trade or suggested donation, but are often given freely as well. 

We are happy to accept gifts or donations from people who would like to support these free educational opportunities or express their gratitude for what they've learned.  

You'll notice that there are also no "ads" or subscriptions on this blog. It has been a great pleasure to learn that there are folks actually reading it and valuing it. And to everyone who's reached out to encourage me in my writing here, I'm deeply grateful. 

And to continue this experiment, right now we're happily giving free "consultations" when possible. This is a sevice that similarly experienced Permaculture Designers typically charge between $120-175/hour for. But it seems sad that we must charge eachother these days just for the chance to meet, connect and have a conversation. Again, if this is a service you value and would like to support, or you would like to show your gratitude, it would be very kind of you, and helpful for us to receive a gift, donation or exchange. 

Or perhaps you will "pay it forward" and do your part to revive the our local "gift economy." 

We were told by my mother, my grandmother, my aunts, my uncles, that giving is the only way to be human, that if you don’t know that giving is essential to survival, then you don’t know how to be human yet. 

~Jeanette Armstrong

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For more information on the importance of reviving the "gift economy," including the "indigenous perspective" quoted above, check out: www.gift-economy.com

For the essay by Jeanette Armstrong, go to:

http://www.gift-economy.com/womenand/womenand_knowledge.html