PERMACULTURE ON TOUR
Catching up with Bill Mollison on his speaking tour about sustainable agriculture systems.
Bill Mollison's concept of sustainable agricultural
systems has caught the attention of many folks. Here's what
the talented Tasmanian has been up to lately.
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In MOTHER NO. 66, permaculturist Bill Mollison introduced
this magazine's readers to an exciting new concept of
agriculture . . . one in which diverse—yield
ecosystem are consciously designed to be self-regulating
and to require a minimal e energy input in order to sustain
themselves The Australian gardener also spoke of the need
for a "new breed" of agricultural designers who would be
trained to command and implement these unique systems and
who would eventually build up an, international
permaculture network, an interconnected system of
functional licks".
Well, that association is now coming into being, since
Mollison is visiting the United States once again, to build
a foundation for the "expanding pyramid of functional
design knowledge" that he's envisioned for years.
Accompanied by Andrew Jeeves, another resident of Tagari
the village in Tasmania, where members of the Permaculture
Institute live and work), Mollison has spent much of this
year touring North America and conducting permaculture
design workshops in North Carolina, Kentucky, New
Hampshire, and California. As a result of those
undertakings, there will be—by this winter—over
100 trained permaculture designers in the United States . .
. including MOTHER staffer Larry Hollar.
Last spring, Larry attended an intensive ten-day seminar
sponsored by the Long Branch Environmental Education Center
in Leicester, North Carolina . .. in which the participants
spent approximately eight hours each day immersed in
readings, reports, and field work related to permanent
agriculture. On the first day of the workshop, the aspiring
designers heard the only pessimistic lecture of the entire
course: a review of the problems facing our world's food
production systems. Mollison argued that such disturbing
phenomena as deforestation, loss of topsoil, desert
encroachment, and water pollution demonstrate the need to
change our present monocultural methods ... which, he said,
are largely responsible for the alarming conditions.
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