- Видео 119
- Просмотров 547 537
Permaculture Institute of North America
США
Добавлен 4 апр 2019
PINA provides integrated education and support for Permaculture designers to address critical challenges in climate, land, and communities. www.pina.in
Видео
The Case for Permaculture - Peter Bane
Просмотров 59714 дней назад
The Case for Permaculture - Peter Bane
Did You See What We Did?
Просмотров 276Месяц назад
Last year was a BIG year for PINA, from Permaculture summits, townhalls, countless interviews with Permaculture top leaders, diplomas, the Permaculture Crossing, thereʻs too much to list! See it all in this video, highlight PINAʻs work during the year of 2024.
The Vote is ON! Design Contest Finalist Panel
Просмотров 622 месяца назад
Every year, PINA hosts a Permaculture Design Contest with a $5,000 grand prize. PINA members chose the Grand Prize Winner. You can sign up as a new member for $20/year at pina.in/membership Already a member? Log in, then enter the Member Portal to review the designs and pick your favorite one!
You Won't Believe the Power of Permaculture in Humanitarian Aid Crisis Zones
Просмотров 8652 месяца назад
You Won't Believe the Power of Permaculture in Humanitarian Aid Crisis Zones
Humanitarian Aid: Permaculture's Biggest Opportunity: Part 2
Просмотров 4402 месяца назад
Humanitarian Aid: Permaculture's Biggest Opportunity: Part 2
Humanitarian Aid: Permaculture's Biggest Opportunity: Part 1
Просмотров 5772 месяца назад
Humanitarian Aid: Permaculture's Biggest Opportunity: Part 1
Biochar EXPERT with 15 Years Experience Shares Top Tips for Success!
Просмотров 1,6 тыс.3 месяца назад
Biochar EXPERT with 15 Years Experience Shares Top Tips for Success!
The Dungeon Master's Guide to Permaculture
Просмотров 1,3 тыс.4 месяца назад
The Dungeon Master's Guide to Permaculture
Permaganic Authenticated: A Permaculture Farm Certification Program
Просмотров 3114 месяца назад
Permaganic Authenticated: A Permaculture Farm Certification Program
The Role of Land Trusts In Permaculture
Просмотров 3245 месяцев назад
The Role of Land Trusts In Permaculture
Growing Up with David Holmgren & Su Dennet, Permaculture Pioneers
Просмотров 2,4 тыс.6 месяцев назад
Growing Up with David Holmgren & Su Dennet, Permaculture Pioneers
Is This the Future of Permaculture Design?
Просмотров 3356 месяцев назад
Is This the Future of Permaculture Design?
Pawpaw: An Edible Landscape All Star
Просмотров 9 тыс.7 месяцев назад
Pawpaw: An Edible Landscape All Star
You may have been live. Lol
If you want to achieve the goal of succession & transmission, you need to get involved and integrated into the wider left resistance movement against fascism. People are desparate for a vision of the future. The right is on the march towards total ecocide. We need a set of tools to fight against that disseminated en masse.
Yeah totally! What type of groups do you have in mind? We are very much looking to work with the permaculture-adjacent movements on all sides of the political spectrum. A thriving ecology is good for all people no matter their politics. But we also need to stop the various psychopaths that are so keen to destroy communities, healthy ecosystems, and mass flourishing!
@@permaculture_institute_na As a permaculture urbanist, creating a set of "tools" to be used for creating permaculture and native ecology friendly elements in urban design contexts will be a huge step forward for implementing things at scale. Stuff like "permaculture roundabout centers," parking lot islands, lane and highway dividers, hedgerow polyculture matrixes (as opposed to evergreen or fence screenings), etc. I understand this runs kind of counter to the hyper-local and site specific design methods that permaculturists ascribe to; but for a mass adoption, we need to lower the barrier of entry for education. I imagine it like playing with legos but if you also had to learn how to make the legos from scratch first. But also, model legislation for cities to adopt & adapt to their codes for allowing food forestry, native plantings, and rainwater infiltration structures that people can take to their city governments (rather than ever city kind of starting from scratch) - but also for creating municipal level plant nurseries which can actually provide enough material to take these ideas from paper to planting. As far as movements, just finding the different ways that to connect the ecological struggle to the current moment (which I have written about and will happily share) and to inform how the lack of an ecological awareness can lead to disaster even by the most progressive movements (such as the draining of the Aral Sea in the USSR or the Four Pests Campaign in China - the idea of the proletariat dominating the bourgeoisie via the State inherently generates a societial relationship of domination with the natural world).
"Permaculture is the largest aid organization of the world... We just don't know it yet" - I felt that. Just watched this after a few of Richard Wolf's latest videos---- funny how the decline of an empire could be the free fall into utopia so many have dreamt of for so long. I haven't utilized my permaculture background in over 8 years, and I feel I am ready to connect to the community and dream once more. I subscribed to your channel and hope to hear more & get involved. 💚
Yeah, I feel that too. I just watched a Richard Wolf thing a few days ago. He's always funny and alarming! Consider joining both PINA as a member, and the PcX - a free social media site co-run by PINA and ARC. It's a good way to jump back into your permaculture background and what's emerging next. community.pcx.earth/share/viUZHpofCwteZOcY? pina.in/membership-landing-page/ Hope to see you around!
First of all Climate change is happening, but it is not cause by Men or Women, it is being cause by the incoming planet X which has an effect on our SUN. As it get closer our climate will dratically change and there is nothing Any one can do about it. Isaiah 24:20 The earth shall reel to and fro like a drunkard, and shall be removed like a cottage; and the transgression thereof shall be heavy upon it; and it shall fall, and not rise again. Revelation 6:15 And the kings of the earth, and the great men, and the rich men, and the chief captains, and the mighty men, and every bondman, and every free man, hid themselves in the dens and in the rocks of the mountains; Revelation 6:16 And said to the mountains and rocks, Fall on us, and hide us from the face of him that sitteth on the throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb: Using the application World Wide Telescope type in these coordinates RA: 05h42m21s Dec:+22:36:49 You will find Planet X. This bullshit of demoting Pluto is nothing more than to confuse the public and discredit the truth about the 10th planet known as PlanetX aka Nibiru as in the Ananaki times which was known to them as the “Planet of the Crossing.” Keep in mind that these coordinates were verified in 2021 and PlanetX might not show up in those coordinates any more but if you see a blank spot on the WWT application while looking, it's because they covered it up as they did once before, but this time it moved on them and we were able to get a good look at it. The New World Order Scum Bags, will use the incoming planet and the 11yrs cycle of the sun to make you believe it it's climate change and tax you while they make their luxuries Bunkers with your tax money. So what happened to Global warming and or oil shortage in the 70's? All a scam by corporations to rise prices on you. These New World order agendas are nothing more than to continue to keep you as Taxpayer slave. If you understood the definition of Income and its history in Constitutional Law to includes Black's Law dictionary 6th edition(Word of Art, Straw Man), you would understand what this is saying. Search RUclips: Brazilian Senator Discloses PLANET X Nibiru on May 25th 2017, ISON PLANET X Carlos Muñoz Ferrada, Planet X - Nibiru 1987 Encyclopedia Disclosure
I have tried to find local people to help me with planning for our property here east of Harrisburg, Oregon. Phone numbers I have left messages with have gone unanswered. Can you help put me in touch with people who can suggest or help plan our property. Thank You
Hey you should come ask on the Permaculture Crossing (PcX). It's a free social media site we co-run for permaculturists. Lot's of good connections to be made. community.pcx.earth/share/viUZHpofCwteZOcY?
Greetings from the Suerte del Molino permaculture farm in Andalusia, Spain.
Greetings!
So how do you get buy-in from the socialite elite class that's pulling on the other end of the rope? Haven't we been playing this tug-of-war game for like... two thousand years now?
Yeah it sure gets old! But that's the game we seem to be embroiled in. Trying to connect to like-minded high-wealth people is a good way to get more permaculture done, in place in local communities and therefor, able to teach, inspire, and support the resistance. Which as we know, hits people at different times, so we need to get many thousands of these systems in the ground over the next few years. They're going in all the time!
"I just want to be here". Love Peter's direct clear messages.
What's the pay like?
Hollywood grade overarching permaculture documentary complete with instructions on how to join the movement. Nice work.
Dang Rick! Been missing you, glad to hear from you and thanks for the complements. Hope you're not too frozen! Talk soon, Jesse
Hello. Nice video. Nice video. But I think it is a wrong application. Because the number of ponds is too many. 1. After making all the ponds, the ponds may collect water in rainy periods, but in dry periods, the bottom water of the forest will drain quickly and the accumulated water will evaporate, and after a while, the forest will be damaged first, and then you will not be able to collect as much water as before. 2. When many people settle in that area, the need for water will increase and eventually you will start digging more wells. You will ruin a very beautiful forest. 3. Isn't it best for the land to remain as it is? Use as much water as the soil gives. Stay with nature.
I have started using char that I make with two #10 cans stuck together with a small hole in the end in our fireplace. Yes it is a little labor intensive but I use all the pine cones in our townhome complex so I figure the same bioelectric current in the char as the area. once they are char I've started adding them to my leaf bins and layering them in my bioreactors and started adding it to my worm bin too. Trying to talk our HOA into doing something with leaves from each year, I do what I can. Has there been a study on where the char comes from under the same conditions and how it works in different areas compared to where it stayed in the same local?
Really inspiring
My dream it’s safe my people struggling without water 💦 just lack of education
Its a very good dream and worth acting on! Study permaculture, get good, share your talents with those in need. Best of luck to you!
Very educational, I've picked up a trailer of buckthorne timber and found it to be incredibly hardwood and I used it for garden bed liners and walkways and TP forms, it was free and delivered, a custom logger could deweed acreage and retrieve buckthorne poles of any size for free & getting paid for it, beautiful wood also
Wow, never thought of buckthorn that way! It's strong wood for sure and thorny, but I can see how it has many uses in the garden. Great work!
Disagree with some points made, but agree with globalism being a big harm. It stopped being free market and went to globalism under Reagan without Reagan being the wiser. Globalism anything but free market, and we really need to go back to localization to get our power back. The problem is the way companies can capture whole markets in a cradle to grave way that while outside of being a traditional monopoly is still a monopoly of sorts...
Yes no doubt. We need a localized system and power base to push these monopoly-esque corporations back. That's the permaculture vision for sure. Thanks for you comment.
Loved this. I had no idea permaculture went beyond growing a food forest. The 'help' went beyond just growing food but growing communities world wide... I am anxious to see Part 2 and beyond. Thank you so much for all y'all are doing. It's people like you that restore my faith in humanity. ***USA Georgia***
Awesome! Thanks for saying so. We'll do another one soon! Come join us for free on our permaculture only social media site, the Permaculture Crossing - community.pcx.earth/share/viUZHpofCwteZOcY?
I definitely want to do this too, I just don't have the knowledge yet
Hey all good. Take a Permaculture Design Course by a local permaculture teacher and you will be well on your way!
waves of change from all sorts of directions to help with transition to a more earth loving stewardship. Thanks for sharing.
We'd LOVE your support in this way. Great share
For thousands if years people in Europe coppiced trees, they made baskets, cages and fences.
When he said Uganda and Madagascar…I was like…you need Rule of Law first…
I love permaculture. The work, ideas and community behind it all brought me hope and out of mental illness. What no one is willing to answer or provide any support on is what discourages me. I might be shunned for these questions as I have been in the past by condescending comments and negative backlash or made an example of, but I am tired and want answers that I can't find. How do I run a business? How do I start a business, that thrives without burnout? How do I get a job in permaculture as I don't think I have the skills to run a business when I am starting fresh in my 40's? I have bought courses, books, went to seminars yet everyone just dances around the conversation or makes suggestions like go to school. That kind of comment doesn't help. And because I don't know everything about all kinds of computer programs and people seem to be unwilling to teach, or intolerant of personality differences, I will stand on the sidelines, like I do for everything. I know this will not encourage anyone to reach out to me but it would be nice if someone actually made a course that did what they market, sell and convince the buyer of. Four large programs I have paid into and with all these thumbs and brains I can't find the power of permaculture. I will still post this, nearly deleted it as I know what my tone comes across as, yet I still want to try for some reason.
Email me! programs@pina.in - let's talk about it. It is an interesting point you've raised.
Take an interest in growing food. Get your hands in the dirt. That's how you get close to God and find peace.
Apprentice &/or work WITH an established permaculture (or in an adjacent) company.
Your problem is finding a job in permaculture, and your personal limitations prevent your acceptance in an organization? Is that what you’re saying? As a specialty contractor since 1975, I’ve hired and worked with many apprentices, they just wanted to learn the trade. At least 4 I know of, probably more, went on to create their own successful companies as contractors. My suggestion to you is to reach out to every permaculture farm on this planet and ask to start as an educated apprentice. Most likely the food you grow and eat will heal what ails you. Be grateful. It’s the best trait to live in.
Any body else find the music to be too loud in the beginning and the bird sound effects, too?
Yes and I made it! haha The next 2 are more roped in.
May I suggest some post editing in future to remove the ums and aams, and remove the music.
You may.
Incredible
Heck yeah!
Thanks for sharing , Polewood for crafting.
Our pleasure! Thanks to Mark!
I think at some point the decision has to be weighed whether people want to make a lot of money doing this or just give the information needed to heal the planet without expecting to make a lot of money off of it. From my perspective, not being a privileged person, it seems like a lot of permaculture information, design, and education is behind a pay wall that is inaccessible to a lot of people who would actually be willing to put the work in. Just an observation from someone who has had to do all the information gathering, action, and implementation without coming from a background of financial privilege.
This was free! So are all our livestreams and interviews. Many of the classic permaculture texts can be found for free. One has to be willing to work at their own permaculture in order to make money from it, or not and just give good information to the masses. Either way, you gotta learn the skills and practice and then get to work. Document your journey and your learning, you will be happy you did!
I liked what he said to get the information out so it can be better for everyone!
For sure!
⚠️ WARNING: when adding manure, food scraps or human excrement, be aware of the chemical danger that could end up in your fertilizer if you source materials from the outside! - Food scraps, usualy have residues of herbicides and pesticides and can contain microplastics from packaging. - Manure, many cattle and horses are fed hay sprayed with GrazeOn, a persistant chemical that kills everything but grass. This goes thru the animals, into their manure and persists thru the biodigester. - Human excrement, beware of PFAS forever chemicals that are often present. Also have to contend with antibiotics, hormones, other medications etc that lingers in the waste and doesnt breakdown in the digester. Know your source!!!
So where do you get clean sources these days, with scientific studies saying there is not a single drop of rain on earth that does not contain any forever chemicals?
Local currencies have a long history, but it is in modern times that they became colorful notes reminiscent of gift certificates and are more of a community morale currency. If you want to make a small community resilient against a federal currency collapse, you back the local currency with something. If gold and silver are impractical, use what they did historically, honey. This honey money was backed by a shelf stable, tangible good that was useful for many things. Careful not to call it money, legal tender or currency, or the Feds will be upon you. Another way could be hyper fractionalized gold in the form of Goldbacks.
Agreed, Money can't just be paper, it needs to be back by something of value. I love the honey idea, a new form of gold backed currency!!
As a hobby colliar of 20+ years I must chime in here and geek it up: - WARNING, nothing in this video shows biochar, everything is actually raw charcoal. - Biochar is technically charcoal colonized by microbial life and absorbed full of nutrients and water. - Adding raw charcoal directly to soil will rob the soil of nutrients before it becomes beneficial in any way. - Add compost, manure and/or urine to charcoal BEFORE putting into it to soil. - The seed sprouts shown growing is a fluke because they are indeed benefiting from the moisture, but come back a month later and see how poorly they develop because of the raw charcoal stealing nutrients from the soil at first. - The easiest way to make charcoal is by digging a pit, getting a hot fire going at the bottom, them slowly adding layers of feed stock. As the top layer burns about half way, add more stock. At the end add tiny pieces to burn and cap off the pile. To save water, use the dirt you dug out to fully cover and smother the fire. Depending on size of pile, it will continue to cook for 1hr to 3 days without air. - Fun facts: - Charcoal buried in soil has been found to last over 1000 years. - 7 lbs of charcoal is the carbon equivalent to burning 1 gallon of gasoline. - You can char other things like cotton cloth and use it as a great fire starter next time. - Temperature is not crucial for any charcoal other than activated charcoal made for filtering/absorbing. - Colliar = charcoal maker - Before coal was found and used in colonial Pennsylvania, charcoal was made to use in the first iron furnaces. - You get denser and larger quantities of charcoal when using hardwood versus softwood. - You can make a still to capture the gases during the charcoal process. After diverting the moisture away, you condense the rest into methanol liquid (fuel) and tar (great for anti-rot treating lumber in ground, but carcinogenic like most modern treatments). - Charcoal is a key ingredient for Terra Preta. Adding fired clay (terracotta) and manure creates a pit of fertility that last many generations. - Biochar only works because of its immense surface area (a grape size nugget is about a football field worth). These coal chunks become sponges for water and nutrients, and apartments for microbes. Bacteria and fungi thrive here and interact with plant roots boosting growth beyond what just fertilizer can do. I've even had chunks left on the surface and tiny spiders move into some of the larger holes. Small life LOVES biochar! - Old school pitch glue was made with melted pine resin and charcoal. It's one of the strongest natural adhesives. If you believe in the carbon pollution issue, make charcoal. If you want richer soils, make charcoal. If you need filters for air, water or GI track, make charcoal. If you want clean, no-chemical cooking briquettes, make charcoal. If you want something to draw with, make charcoal. So....just go make some charcoal lol!
Water saved if you use the soil capping method, but quenching with water has significant benefit as well as the sudden and dramatic change in temperature and the massive amount of steam generated has shown that it actually causes the biochar to become more porous, thus increasing it’s surface area even further.
@tcoxor52 this is true. I was just mentioning an alternative if water is scarce.
Great comment, thanks for the addition to the discussion!
You are NOT limited to wood to make biochar! Other examples are bamboo, leaves, pinecones, corn stalks and cobs, hay bundles and so much more. Heck, you can make char-cloth to help light future fires too. Anything that is mostly carbon can be turned to char.
Very true! Thanks for pointing that out
can the process of making bio char release carbon into the air? Could it be bad for the climate if everybody did it?
Carbon gets released by burning and decomposition. If we do nothing, the carbon level will be the same. By making charcoal and burying it, we lock that carbon up and remove it out of circulation for over 1000 years.
It does release some carbon during the process, but the overall net gain is carbon sequestration. If the same fuel material (say a barrel of wood chips) was to be used as mulch or added to a compost pile and just left to slowly decay, eventually some of the carbon from from that will be sequestered by mycorrhizal fungi and other soil microorganisms for their functioning. But a much larger percentage will be lost to off-gassing as the carbon source slowly decays over years or decades. By converting that same carbon source to biochar through pyrolysis, you are burning off trapped gases and a small percentage will be lost to ash, but a much larger percentage is conserved as pure carbon that is then incorporated back into the soil and has been shown to remain for at least a few hundred years, some say possibly as long as even a thousand years or more. So yes, some CO2 is released, but numerous studies have shown that if burned properly, a far greater percentage of carbon is conserved compared to just allowing the fuel source to decay through natural processes.
I've done this a few times in a pit, definitely very labor intensive. Once you have all the material to be burned staged nearby, just start adding into the fire before the previous material is in its last third of the burn. Add enough so the last layer gets smothered and the new fuel starts. Took me about an hour or two of constant attention, but got lots of char. Great video!
Great point! Thanks for he info!
Biochar makes no sense to, too energy\time intensive. Prescribed burns make sense, but not spending time and energy cutting\gathering biomass just to burn it up. Jean Pain's systemof chipping and gaining heat from the pile to keep grow beds warm in a greenhouse all winter is a much more advanced system. More yields for the same amount of work.
It’s not just being burned up to ash though. You are creating a carbon sequestration stream that has immense benefit to soil structure and health. Just using wood chips as mulch (also important) or in a compost pile for creating a greenhouse heating system does not do the same as biochar. As that mulch or compost pile decays over time, a large percentage of the carbon is lost to the atmosphere through off-gassing.
@tcoxor52 Can't we sequester carbon in living systems without needing to expend all the energy of fire? That's the part that doesn't compute for me, super energy intensive. Carbon sequestration is about shifting the way the planet holds heat. How does it make sense to release a bunch of heat in the process of doing that? I have heard the soil building aspect is legit though, I do have to give that part credit, it is a very nice ammendment. I think it's energy audit wouldn't make sense to scale up for being a huge part of sequestration though. We gotta regrow wastelands, change albedo from surface area coverage, slow the carbon cycles in complex dance of ecosystems, not strong broad industrial strokes like making coal.
@@HoboGardenerBen we have been lied to about greenhouse gases and global warming. research climate control, climate modification patents, trillion watt laser to heat up ionosphere, etc
@ Absolutely, of course we can. In fact sequestering carbon via living plants, trees, and mycelial networks is the number one sink of carbon we should all be striving for and stewarding. And I don’t think anyone in the biochar advocacy community is suggesting we should be cutting down trees and killing plants just so we can produce biochar. But natural senescence is always going to be part of a living ecosystem, so why not use those resources to our greatest advantage. Within my system (part managed Syntropic food forest/garden, part native forest) I obtain a lot of biomass from dropped limbs, deadfall, pruning of orchard trees as well as support species, and from woodier annuals (corn, grain sorghum, giant miscanthus, and sunflower stalks) and perennial shrubs, bushes, and flowers on an annual basis. So, while some of that debris and biomass is left in place as chop and drop mulch or used as a carbon input in compost production, or wood chips (from larger deadfall) the vast majority of it is turned into biochar.
@ Also, while producing biochar is energy intensive in the short term, it actually conserves more energy loss in the long term. Again, you release some carbon via the process of burning, but ultimately it is a net gain of lost carbon that will remain stable and sequestered for centuries as opposed to a much larger loss of carbon via off-gassing over the span of years through natural decay.
Why not post the full interview over here on RUclips?
They did, this is a clip from a previous conversation.
@Cringeosaurus Could you link the full interview here please?
Normally the full interviews go behind the vault after a certain amount of time, available to PINA members only, but we want to spread the info, so here's the link to the full interview with Kelpie: ruclips.net/user/live-OXio_sajuU?feature=share Think about becoming a member to PINA though to support our work, together we'll turn Permaculture into a movement!!
Interesting topic. Is there any easy to digest how-to-guides for this kind of community projects, local currency making etc? I find it hard to know were to start.
Try the book The Regeneration Handbook by the speaker, Don Hall.
Saved to my most important playlist, thank you 🤝
I do not watch videos that are so amateur that they play noise behind their narrators. Play your ghastly music in the lulls.
They are blaming nature for what they have destroyed for profit.
They're trying to restore watersheds
Participating in a PDC will make one more aware of their position on this earth; more so than even the most decorated university graduate.
Very true. Thanks for sharing this
getting close to nature and the ground is healthy and fun.
Isnʻt it?!!!!!!