Episodes

Tuesday Nov 27, 2012
Tuesday Nov 27, 2012
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My guest for this episode is Chuck Marsh a permaculture teacher, designer, nursery person, and one of the pioneers of the modern eco-village movement, as he, along with Peter Bane, designed the Earthaven eco-village in the United States.
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Friday Nov 23, 2012
Friday Nov 23, 2012
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This episode comes from my notes after attending a lecture by Susan Godwin, the 2012 Nigerian Female Food Hero. A small holding farmer, she is one of the many women who make up the source of 70% of the food in Nigeria. Often without support from their local community.
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Tuesday Nov 20, 2012
Tuesday Nov 20, 2012
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In early October, 2012, I joined Oxfam and the Women In Agriculture Network to take a tour of Yeehaw Farm in Duncannon, Pennsylvania. Yeehaw Farm is a multi-generational farm operated by Judi Radel that moved to sustainable practices 5 years ago. The farm raises cows, goats, and chickens, as well as vegetables and grains, selling the resulting products to local customers via Farmer's Markets, their own on-site farm stand, and several CSA options. This tour, and the thoughts that come from it, integrate well with the conversations had with Warren Brush about broadscale permaculture, and Seth Wilner on meeting farmer's where they are to get appropriate buy-in. We share with the farmer's but first must seek to understand the place they operate from. If you have an opportunity to join a farm tour and see local operations, I highly recommend it. Observe what they share, interact with the others in the group, and leave with a new wealth of resources.
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Tuesday Nov 13, 2012
Tuesday Nov 13, 2012
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In this episode I review Peter Bane's The Permaculture Handbook: Garden Farming for Town and Country
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Friday Oct 26, 2012
Friday Oct 26, 2012
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In this episode my guest is Mary Johnson and our conversation is an introduction to the idea of Nutrient Dense Farming. Mary is a permaculture teacher, owner of Watershed Resource Consultants, co-founder of Terra-Genesis International, and holds a Master's of Science in Plant and Soil Science. She's worked with a variety of partner organizations on projects all over the world including Brazil, Kenya, and, as you will hear in the interview, Panama. (Mary's first interview) This interview serves as a brief overview of Nutrient Dense Farming: how increase the nutrition of our foods by building better soil and a simple way to measure these changes with a simple handheld tool. To learn more you will want to read and research on your own. Resources to help you along are provided below. After this conversation three questions came to mind: 1. What nutrients do plants needs? 2. What are sources for these nutrient? 3. How can I apply permaculture to acquire, rather than buy, these nutrients and build soil? Just as Mary provided us with an introduction to nutrient dense farming, my thoughts here are an overview. If you would like me to research these ideas in-depth and provide a full episode, or series, on nutrients, soil amendments, and dynamic accumulating plants, I can do that. Let me know. So, what nutrients do plants need? Humans use fat, protein, and carbohydrates in large quantities, these are our macronutrients, plants have their own: carbon (C), oxygen (O), and Hydrogen (H), as well as nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), and potassium (K). The first three plants get from the air and water which are then processed via photosynthesis. The last three, and the other nutrients, come from the soil which we amend and build to assist our plants. If you've handled a bag of fertilizer the NPK numbers refer to Nitrogen, Phosphorus, and Potassium, in that order, with the letters corresponding to the entry on the periodic table of elements. Then come the secondary nutrients: Calcium (Ca), Magnesium (Mg), and Sulfur (S). The micronutrients, are a longer list: Boron (B), Chlorine (Cl), Cobalt (Co), Copper (Cu), Iron (Fe), Manganese (Mn), Molybdenum (Mo), Nickel (Ni), Silicon (Si), Sodium (Na), Zinc (Zn), and Vanadium (Va). The primary and secondary nutrients are fairly simple to test for at most soil labs. The micro-nutrients may require more specialized labs to sort out for you. If you want to have these soil tests done there, in the United States, Aglabs.com can provide these services. Elsewhere in the world contact a local soil or environmental testing lab and ask them if they provide micro-nutrient soil test and they should be able to help you. The PDF on plant nutrients from NorthEastern Oklahoma A&M I like for the simplicity in explaining each nutrient, as well as how they impact plants, which soils are likely to have issues, and additional information. NorthEastern Oklahoma A&M Plant Nutrient PDF Prepared with the information in that document, combined with a soil analysis including trace minerals, you can determine what amendments to add and in what quantities to build your soil to an ideal mix for your plants. Which brings me to the second question: What are sources for these nutrients? The list of amendments useful for any particular nutrient, of course, varies. Bone meal is good for phosphate and calcium. Compost is rich in nitrogen and carbon. Urine is high in nitrogen, with good quantities of potassium, and phosphorus. Greensand is chock full of potassium, iron, magnesium, silica, and many other trace minerals. A trip to the garden center or DIY shop can provide bags and bags of everything we could generally needs, but what if you are looking for one particular nutrient? In that case a little bit of research is your friend. I chose the first nutrient on our list: boron, and did a web search “boron for the garden”. A link took me to an article from Spectrum Analytic, a testing lab in Ohio. At the bottom was a list of sources for boron. Surprisingly a common household product, Borax, is a source. You can do this for every nutrient you may need to get your soil started in the right direction. And our last question: How can I apply permaculture to acquiring, rather than buying, the nutrients and build soil? Mary provided a good description of this in her discussion of the Panamanian village: use your ability to observe to determine where plants will grow best. Use your knowledge: If you know certain plants share similar requirements and growing conditions, look for them in the landscape and grow your similar plant there. Experiment with slow and simple solutions: plant trials in the landscape and find where conditions are the best . Value your renewable resources by using your accumulating plants, like comfrey, as slash and mulch plants. Use those same plants to mine nutrients from one area and move the minerals, now trapped in the plant tissue, somewhere else. A good foundation in the ethics and principles of Permaculture allow you to truly design anything. And remember: Permaculture is, as a design system, largely based on our available information and the ability to apply that information creatively. We now live in a world that is more connected than any other time in history. You can find solutions to almost any question related to building a better world. Sponsors Nancy Grove and everyone at Old Path Farm Tony Murlin Resources Dr. Carey Reams Dr. Elaine Ingham International Ag Labs Remineralize the Earth Bionutrient Food Association Dan Kittredge Alan Chartock in Conversation with Dan Kittredge Ray Archuleta (Web Article about his work)
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Friday Oct 19, 2012
Friday Oct 19, 2012
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My guest for this episode is Seth Wilner and we discuss Holistic Management and Whole Farm Planning. Seth is an Extension Field Specialist with the University of New Hampshire extension office where he teaches and works as a holistic manager and whole-farm planner, among his other duties.
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Tuesday Oct 02, 2012
Tuesday Oct 02, 2012
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My guest for this episode is Eric Toensmeier, author of Perennial Vegetables and co-author of Edible Forest Gardens with Dave Jacke, He, along with Jonathan Bates, also wrote the Paradise Lot: Two Plant Geeks, One-Tenth of an Acre, and the Making of an Edible Oasis.
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Thursday Sep 27, 2012
Thursday Sep 27, 2012
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An examination of the cost of a Permaculture Design Course compared to the cost of a college education and break down where that tuition money is spent.
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Friday Sep 14, 2012
Friday Sep 14, 2012
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Friday Sep 07, 2012
Friday Sep 07, 2012
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Donate Directly: via PayPal -or- Venmo @permaculturepodcast
Want to listen to more conversations about Permaculture? Browse the extensive archives of the show.
My guest for this episode is Andrew Faust and he shares with us a way to re-vision, or re-imagine permaculture.
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