Sacred Earth Institute is committed to promoting ecological based whole systems designs that are founded on principals of sustainability, harmony and diversity.
Our educational programs as well as our design services follow the ecological awareness inherent within the fundamentals of permaculture design.
The Principles of Permaculture Design
The principles of permaculture provide a set of universally applicable guidelines that can be used in designing sustainable habitats. Distilled from multiple disciplines - ecology, energy conservation, landscape design, and environmental science - these principles are inherent in any permaculture design, in any climate, and at any scale.
- Relative location
- Each element performs multiple functions
- Each function is supported by many elements
- Energy efficient planning
- Using biological resources
- Energy cycling
- Small-scale intensive systems
- Natural plant succession and stacking
- Polyculture and diversity of species
- Increasing "edge" within a system
- Observe and replicate natural patterns
- Pay attention to scale
- Attitude
The Practical Application of Permaculture
Permaculture is not limited to plant and animal agriculture, but also includes community planning and development, use of appropriate technologies (coupled with an adjustment of life-style), and adoption of concepts and philosophies that are both earth-based and people-centered, such as bioregionalism.
Many of the appropriate technologies advocated by permaculturists are well known. Among these are solar and wind power, composting toilets, solar greenhouses, energy efficient housing, and solar food cooking and drying.
Due to the inherent sustainability of perennial cropping systems, permaculture places a heavy emphasis on tree crops. Systems that integrate annual and perennial crops - such as alley cropping and agroforestry - take advantage of "the edge effect," increase biological diversity, and offer other characteristics missing in monoculture systems. Thus, multicropping systems that blend woody perennials and annuals hold promise as viable techniques for large-scale farming. Ecological methods of production for any specific crop or farming system (e.g., soil building practices, biological pest control, composting) are central to permaculture as well as to sustainable agriculture in general.
Since permaculture is not a production system, per se, but rather a land use and community planning philosophy, it is not limited to a specific method of production. Furthermore, as permaculture principles may be adapted to farms or villages worldwide, it is site specific and therefore amenable to locally adapted techniques of production.
As an example, standard organic farming and gardening techniques utilizing cover crops, green manures, crop rotation, and mulches are emphasized in permacultural systems. However, there are many other options and technologies available to sustainable farmers working within a permacultural framework (e.g., chisel plows, no-till implements, spading implements, compost turners, rotational grazing). The decision as to which "system" is employed is site-specific and management dependent.
Farming systems and techniques commonly associated with permaculture include agroforestry, swales, contour plantings, Keyline agriculture (soil and water management), hedgerows and windbreaks, and integrated farming systems such as pond-dike aquaculture, aquaponics, intercropping, and polyculture.
Gardening and recycling methods common to permaculture include edible landscaping, keyhole gardening, companion planting, trellising, sheet mulching, chicken tractors, solar greenhouses, spiral herb gardens, swales, and vermicomposting.
Water collection, management, and re-use systems like Keyline, greywater, rain catchment, constructed wetlands, aquaponics (the integra-tion of hydroponics with recirculating aquaculture), and solar aquatic ponds (also known as Living Machines) play an important role in permaculture designs.
Adaptive Design
As designers using the guiding principles of permaculture and ecology observation of changes over time are a key tool to the success of any endeavor. The principal of adaptive design looks to 'long thoughtful observation' to create a desired outcome. At the macro scale the whole field of permaculture and ecological design is changing and shifting to the needs of the earth and creating more livable communities while relearning our connections to the earth that sustain us.
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