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Permaculture Design for the Homestead Part 2

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  • Опубликовано: 8 май 2019
  • This workshop covers fundamentals of permaculture design for people developing self-sufficiency with the land. We will cover zones, useful plants, and water, among many other principles of permaculture. This workshop will help you develop a design plan for your own homestead in harmony with the land and natural elements surrounding you. In part 2, permaculturist John Nelson begins by talking about design methods to keep the water circulating on your land as long as possible.

Комментарии • 25

  • @MichaelFlynn-jx2dd
    @MichaelFlynn-jx2dd 10 месяцев назад +1

    That's so true! Sorry for my previous disrespectful comment...I watched the rest of the series and it's very good especially on driveways and drainage.

  • @joemadre9550
    @joemadre9550 3 года назад +3

    I'm going to dig and build my own aquaduct system, its going to be the best game.

  • @diversitylove5460
    @diversitylove5460 2 года назад +4

    The greenhouse water basin. Yes I totally agree. Now this is very old design. The most recent examples are the qunat in Persia and the ice houses in the Persian desert.
    In west African architecture they add the power of wind to the thermal dynamics of water, as they have wind towers to an underground tavern. It is ancient air conditioning.
    However the approach is older than the separated continents as you find another water harvesting wind spiral buried deep underwater in South Africa and also in Peru.
    The commonality of design features leads me to assume. That it is so old that cultures using it, once common cultures, but became distinct. The structures were abandoned and their purpose forgotten with time until recently.

  • @bradenmcdaniel2456
    @bradenmcdaniel2456 3 года назад +2

    Award moment there with the piping

  • @DJ-uk5mm
    @DJ-uk5mm 3 года назад +4

    Thank you for sharing this great presentation ;-)

  • @kriswhite1344
    @kriswhite1344 2 года назад +1

    Thanks again!

  • @Sheenasalesthriftytreasures
    @Sheenasalesthriftytreasures 2 года назад +1

    So beautiful there I look forward to watching and learning to improve my food forest thank you

  • @bethbluett4211
    @bethbluett4211 2 года назад +2

    This is amazing!

  • @diversitylove5460
    @diversitylove5460 2 года назад +1

    I love you guys. Thanks for sharing

  • @hudson8865
    @hudson8865 2 года назад +1

    Thank you.

  • @kanamugireinnocent5030
    @kanamugireinnocent5030 3 года назад +1

    You are good trainer like Rick Coleman

  • @zachwalker1287
    @zachwalker1287 4 года назад +3

    You use whatever you got when you got it

  • @diversitylove5460
    @diversitylove5460 2 года назад +3

    Also there are ancient arts of using roots. Permaculture use roots to address soil conditions. In India roots have been used for structure, just google living bridges in India. The same structure underground is permissive to water flow

  • @doloresreynolds8145
    @doloresreynolds8145 2 года назад +2

    There are often rules about how far your well must be from a septic system, if you are using one.

  • @joeyhinds6216
    @joeyhinds6216 5 лет назад

    Why the re-upload? Just curious.

    • @Feezwa
      @Feezwa 5 лет назад +1

      Because the previous version of part 2 was filled with constant scenes of black fading in and out effect every 2-3 minutes while the audio was rolling normally.

    • @livingwebfarms
      @livingwebfarms  5 лет назад +2

      technical glitch on first one

  • @stuartmartin7259
    @stuartmartin7259 Год назад

    If you use plastic pipes for water supply make sure it's polyethylene, not PVC. Don't use PVC anywhere if you can avoid it!.

  • @Chocoboranger
    @Chocoboranger 3 года назад +3

    I wouldn't use poly pipe for anything. theres probably so much microplastic in that just contaminating everything. rather go with the bamboo even if it is a pain in the ass.

    • @doloresreynolds8145
      @doloresreynolds8145 2 года назад +1

      Odds are that there is already microplastic in your water, it is in our rain, after all. The plumbing is unlikely to add much, if any. Micro plastics generally enter a system by floating into a water system as larger plastic, then getting beaten around by water action and sun.

    • @HavaWM
      @HavaWM 2 года назад

      What @@doloresreynolds8145 said!
      They’ve gone in and tested brand-new land - out in the Pacific Ocean, just created by a volcano - to see if they could find micro plastics, and they did. This land was *literally* just created via volcanic activity last month and already has micro plastics on it.
      Skip the bamboo and just plumb like a normal person. 😉 I promise you, you’re not doing anything but making yourself crazy otherwise!

    • @kloewe6069
      @kloewe6069 2 года назад

      @@HavaWM Why not invest our time to reduce what plastics we can?

  • @annetteericsson266
    @annetteericsson266 2 года назад +2

    Unless you live in the braine dead state of Oregon or Washington USA where it is illegal to catch rainwater even in a barrel or for watering your garden.

    • @HavaWM
      @HavaWM 2 года назад +2

      Actually, this is wrong. I just looked up the regs in Oregon and Washington, and this is what I found (copy/paste here):
      Oregon - Rainwater harvesting is legal, but only using rooftop surfaces.
      Washington - No regulations or laws against rainwater harvesting.
      So there are NO regulations at all in Washington, and in Oregon, you can absolutely catch rainwater that falls on your roof.
      Just FYI, Colorado and Utah are the states with the tightest rainwater regulations, and Colorado has made two changes to their law recently to start to open this back up.
      Hope that helps!

  • @MichaelFlynn-jx2dd
    @MichaelFlynn-jx2dd 10 месяцев назад

    So much ignorance from this lecturer re water storage.
    A 10,000 galleon concrete tank 45000 litres is not expensive in the context of total homesteading costs. Two or three of these can fill up with winter rainfall, providing a usefull amount then for summer!