This is your wake-up call - Start a Garden

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  • Опубликовано: 22 май 2024
  • This is your wake-up call to start building self sufficiency.
    My prediction: We are 7-10 years away from massive societal change due to the End of Growth (See Richard Heinberg's work here, among thousands of other economists, and ecologists). You know what is also about 7-10 years away? Fruit if you plant trees TODAY.
    That means that this could be the single most important year of your life. Start building your self sufficiency now, so that you and your family are prepared for what is coming?
    What is coming? I discuss that in this video.
    Sources:
    1) IESO Pathways to decarbonization - www.ieso.ca/-/media/Files/IES...
    2) IEA - Net Zero by 2050 - www.iea.org/reports/net-zero-...
    3) IEA - Updated Roadmap to net zero - www.iea.org/reports/world-ene...
    4) Arthur Berman interview on Peak Oil - www.resilience.org/stories/20...
    5) US petroleum makeup - www.eia.gov/dnav/pet/pet_cons...
    6) Antonio Turiel - Antonio Turiel: "Deep Challenges: Oceans, Scarcity and Culture" | The Great Simplification #65 by Nate Hagen - • Antonio Turiel: "Deep ...
    ______________________
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    Want to see more of the family? Love board games? We now have a second channel called Game Knight: / @gameknight464
    On this channel we show more family life, camping, board games, more kids more wife, more fun outside of gardening. Want to get to know the family better? Check it up and subscribe!
    You can now also find Canadian Permaculture Legacy on Odysee here: odysee.com/@CanadianPermacult...
    Odysee will automatically import any videos from here, and is a blockchain streaming service - so once my videos are there, they are there forever. Unhackable. Permissionless.
    Channels we support:
    Moving to the country to start a new life. Young Family trades sodgrass for a horse farm over at Barn Boots and Country Roots: / @barnbootsandcountryroots
    For great recipes, cooking, storing, canning, and growing tips, check out Gardening in the North: / @gardeninginthenorth
    Music credits:
    Epidemic sound: www.epidemicsound.com/referra...
    Closer by Jay Someday | / jaysomeday
    Music promoted by www.free-stock-music.com
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Комментарии • 395

  • @frederickanderson8778
    @frederickanderson8778 Месяц назад +2

    What a BOMBER of a video. This video should have 10 million views.

  • @risasb
    @risasb Год назад +32

    In my case I sussed all this out in the 70s and began to live accordingly, but now I'm aging out of the whole business and will probably not be here in 7 years. Thank you for putting it so well, hope it does some younger folks some good. 🙏

  • @highspiritsfarm781
    @highspiritsfarm781 Год назад +8

    The average home not even sixty years ago was under 1000 sq feet. Now it’s twice that or more. 50amp service was sufficient before all of our appliances, etc. now people expect a bathroom for every bedroom, huge homes with up to 400 amp service etc.
    overconsumption has reached a fever pitch! There can not be infinite growth on a finite planet!
    We live in a home 850 sq feet. Looking forward to transitioning to off grid. Always downsizing our requirements.
    Good video. You are just saying it like it is.

    • @wallpello_1534
      @wallpello_1534 Месяц назад

      This is true but those homes had gas or wood heat, now they have electric heat and most homes are 200 amp not 400. I'm an electrician

    • @highspiritsfarm781
      @highspiritsfarm781 Месяц назад +1

      @@wallpello_1534 history buff here. Plenty of the McMansions that are being built are 400 Amp.
      Hubby is an electrician and we upgraded the farm to 200 Amp from 50. ESA guy was mentioning how many of the bigger builds were needing 400 for everybody’s wants and toys…Crazy.
      We have the upgrade for the shop and extra if needed. However we are moving towards heat pump and off grid.
      It's the sheer size of homes and runaway Consumption we should be concerned with. Nobody can make a 'shack' according to the conservatives work anymore?
      Geeze. Families were bigger...houses under 1000 Sq ft.
      Less to heat and cool.
      Hey in our area most homes didn't even have electricity until late 1950s... can you Imagine? Plenty of folks enjoying a smaller cosy home. Less to look after with a bit of yard.

  • @paulspanish-he2ki
    @paulspanish-he2ki 11 дней назад +1

    I watched this video about a month ago, and watched it again today. Interesting for me because of the timing. I am just beginning to build my own "forest". (there is probably a different definition for "forest" living in Denver). Watching this video again has made me realize how important it is for us to be as self sufficient as possible. I have a greater desire to educate myself and your channel/information is the best thing that I have found. Thanks a ton!!, Keith!!

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy  8 дней назад

      Thanks for supporting the channel Paul! Yes absolutely it's so critically important that we become less reliant on supply chains going forward. Each individually but also as a whole community/society. This is why I made this youtube channel.
      The less people who become completely desperate when disruptions happen, the less likely we get looting and pillaging when people who aren't prepared start struggling.
      We have so many people who grow nothing but sod grass useless lawns. If we can convert even just some of that space into hardy food production, then it makes a massive difference when the challenges that face us, come knocking at the door.

    • @paulspanish-he2ki
      @paulspanish-he2ki 7 дней назад +1

      @@CanadianPermacultureLegacy thanks for the feedback and thoughts. I agree with you. I have 2 neighbors that are curious about my plans. I think that they will both eventually want to start on there yards as well. Poco a poco!!

  • @garthwunsch
    @garthwunsch Год назад +13

    If I had the power to force everyone to watch this video, I would use it!
    I have two young apple trees planted and another one ordered. Apples store well and we like them. I designed and built our home 50 years ago and a good functioning cold cellar was part of the design. I’m thankful for that insight.

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy  Год назад +2

      ❤️
      I created this video in this format, because I wanted to have a video that is the default "send this to my friend who has thier head in the sand" type of video.
      It took me a while to sketch this one out, because I really wanted to ensure the flow was there made sense, etc. I do hope it came across that way. It ended up longer than I wanted, but this is just such a complex topic... so deep, so interwoven, that it's impossible to cover it in 10 minutes. This one already feels a little bit like drinking from a firehose.
      I just hope it ended up coming across as I hope it does. Both a wake up call, but equally inspiring action.

    • @garthwunsch
      @garthwunsch Год назад

      I’ve circulated pretty widely already. We can only lead the horse to the water… well done my friend. I still haven’t forgotten about that cold one we loosely planned before covid struck.

  • @___.51
    @___.51 Год назад +13

    A little self sufficiency and a lot of community will soften any blow that is to come. Make those connections with your neighbors, treat them to a homemade rhubarb pie and offer to help them plant some rhubarb in their own back yard. Little things like that to open channels. Pay attention to who is receptive, cultivate their curiosity and you will grow together. No man is an island.

  • @renamarsland9642
    @renamarsland9642 Год назад +5

    YES!!!!!
    In 2020, I saw the writing on the proverbial wall…when the world shut down!! While many people were buying TVs and Bags and bags of Toilet Paper, I bought a 1950s home with an acre of land, seeds, trees, and a bread maker.
    Three years later, I have 8 apple trees, 2 pear trees, 2 plum trees, service berry bushes, gooseberry, blueberry bushes, rhubarb, black and red current bushes, black berry bushes, and perennial herbs. I’m starting to plant nut trees and perennial vegetables…and I’m building a chicken coop for our future egg laying hens.
    For three years, I’ve been learning about permaculture, and learning about sowing seeds, seed saving; growing veggies, preparing various garden beds, harvesting, learning how to can, and freeze our food; learning the medicinal aspects of various plants; learning how to bake;learning other basic domestic skills….and most importantly, teaching my three young children all that I have learned and continue to learn!!
    I don’t want to ever again walk into a grocery store and worry about the shelves being bear or not being able to afford food or wonder what’s in my food!
    Food production today is completely unsustainable and environmentally destructive! We need to relearn the skills that were second nature to our ancestors! And take back that knowledge and keep it out of the hands and control of government and corporations that are ONLY interested in MONEY!!
    Thank you for this video!!!
    🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🌎

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy  Год назад +3

      And a LOT of people did that! There was a huge uptick in gardening interest on social media. Now imagine how bad it would be if there were food shortages for reasons like drought, gas shortages, wars over water, etc. It's best to start when you don't need it, so you have the skills and infrastructure to support you when you DO need it.

  • @sheilal3172
    @sheilal3172 Год назад +32

    I've been yammering for years at my little sister to begin to grow her own food. It finally sank in! She said she felt ordered by the Lord to get her act together and begin being more self sufficient. She's building raised beds, getting wood chips, etc. She calls me almost daily to tell what's coming up!

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy  Год назад +5

      So fun! It will be so incredibly rewarding to share something so powerful together.

    • @sukotu23
      @sukotu23 11 месяцев назад +3

      "ordered by the Lord" - not sure about that part, buddy.

    • @tammyohlsson7966
      @tammyohlsson7966 9 месяцев назад

      Called by the Lord, God of all, master of the universe, is the best reason to do anything! Blessings!

  • @jend3457
    @jend3457 Год назад +44

    It’s one thing to know all of these things, it’s quite another to have someone give you the whole lay of the land rapid fire. Consider the fire lit and thank you for the nudge one needs to keep going. Maybe off topic, but I don’t think so. You are a parent and so am I. Beyond modelling this kind of lifestyle for our children, how do we prepare them for the realities of the next 10 years and beyond (without scaring the ever-loving shit out of them and crushing their dreams)?

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy  Год назад +26

      That's a tough one for sure, and it depends on the parenting style, but especially the child.
      I've raised them their whole lives by telling them the honest truth and trusting they can handle it. My kids are very strong in this way. They know the challenges we face going forward. My oldest is now in grade 11 and is in the crucial years of deciding what he wants to do for his career. He is absolutely empowered to drive change, and wants to get into engineering for that reason. He is more along the lines of space exploration and technology, and wants to one day help establish humanity on Mars and terraform it.
      I think it does depend on the child. Are they naturally the type to have this burden weigh them down and disempower them? Or are they they type to rigid-up and fight?
      In the end, I think our jobs as parents isn't to raise children, but rather raise adults. So I always default to preparing them for challenges they will face, and put a priority on brutal honesty, couched in a hope that solutions can be made. Must be made.

    • @thomaswolf6507
      @thomaswolf6507 Год назад +5

      @@CanadianPermacultureLegacy I'm a top honors STEM undergrad, half a semester from graduation, a couple semesters of prerequisites from transfer to UW-Madison.
      I've worked in the private sector as a researcher/writer and no longer view college as a viable plan. I wrote a term paper on how we cannot stop climate failure without removing barriers (people against progress) and aced it, like all the others.
      Now, family members younger than I refuse to attend college.
      I no longer have a way to tell them they are likely wasting their time when self-education is superior to college curriculum, and it's a bad investment via interest rates.
      How do you think we can solve the education crisis required to create competent scientists and engineers while those points remain valid?

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy  Год назад +13

      Man, or how about just hedonism in general. The whole mindset of "well, we're fked, so let's party". The coal oil and gas lobby interests are putting out that propaganda now and its working.
      How to fight against that? I don't know, I really don't. Value real skills over paper education. That isn't to say that getting a good education isn't a decent plan, IF it's in a field that will be in demand in the changing times. I certainly wouldn't be paying tuition for a journalism degree right now though. I'd rather take a PDC, a woodworking class, construction skills, and learn some real knowledge that may come in handy one day.

    • @gerrywalsh6853
      @gerrywalsh6853 Год назад +2

      To the hole jobs of the future thing AI is scary as crap. Driving anything can be done better by a computer. Sure ai is even doing new chemicals and metallurgy. Even welding has a robot that can do the inside welds vertical and overhead in ships. So we have alot of jobs on the chopping block.

    • @jadefawn
      @jadefawn Год назад +7

      Takota Cohen, Rob Avis and Michelle Avis' book "building your permaculture property" has some pretty deep and insightful reflections on maintaining positivity through their description of the regenerative paradigm vs the sustainable paradigm. It helped me a lot. Made me realize i didnt have to think of myself as lesser than or detrimental to nature and be angry or fearful of myself and the state of the world, but instead realize that i AM nature in action and i can replace self loathing with reverance for nature and my place in it. They obviously word it a lot better, but i think the main message i try to impart to the kids in my family as they learn the reality of our situation is not shaming ourselves, or putting energy into how we can do less bad but how can we do more good? We are all on our permaculture journeys, not because we want to sustain, but because we realize that we have the power to regenerate. We cant fix all the problems, but we can try our best to make things a little better for ourselves and our neighbours ❤

  • @meganw3397
    @meganw3397 Год назад +21

    My family and I have been thinking more and more this way lately. We homeschool, so I've made permaculture a class for the kids so we can develop the skills together. I've been binging Nate Hagans' podcast The Great Simplification. If this message resonates with anyone who hasn't heard of Nate Hagans, you should give it a go. It's scary, but having something beautiful and delicious to work toward as a solution takes the edge off. Thanks for putting all the work into making these videos.

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy  Год назад +1

      Thanks Megan. Best of luck to you and your family. I wish my parents did this kind of thing with me when I was a kid, I may have found this path sooner. I think you are doing great by you and your family!

    • @BeautifulEarthJa
      @BeautifulEarthJa Год назад +1

      Thanks for this

  • @CampingforCool41
    @CampingforCool41 Год назад +13

    I really appreciate your science based approach to this. I don't really like "prepper culture" because it tends to be super individualistic and often not based on the inevitable climate struggles- but it's just a fact that we will not be able to continue living like we have been indefinitely. And the more those of us with the resources and land to create permaculture gardens, the less pressure will be on the system to feed us as well as the people who aren't fortunate enough to have that. It's better for everyone. I also believe we need to start thinking of different ways to share resources and goods: Starting tool libraries, giving away seeds and cuttings for free, and my dream would be shifting to a library economy.

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy  Год назад +6

      The best way to prep is to grow community resilience and social capital, not to isolate with guns and rations.

    • @annburge291
      @annburge291 Год назад

      The problem with rations is that they often consist of highly processed food products that are shelf stable. They don't do much for our metabolic health. They are extremely expensive, packaging is not often environmentally friendly, and the food gets spoiled by time or incorrect storage methods. Perhaps these food products are useful in an emergency such as an earthquake, but even then, whole foods could be brought in using the army if the political and health biosecurity system would allow it. It's ridiculous that refugee camps can receive food products at great expense but not seeds, gardening tools, place to make compost and live food animals with supporting infrastructure.

  • @tovarischluna
    @tovarischluna 9 месяцев назад +1

    We gotta start building community alliances of gardeners and work together to feed eachother. 💪

  • @trudgingtheroadofhappydest3983
    @trudgingtheroadofhappydest3983 Год назад +6

    🇨🇦 Hi Keith. I got my PDC in 2011. None of my family, friends or coworkers had any idea what I was talking about. Ha ha. So glad to see it becoming more main stream. I like the saying permaculture dispels despair. One very, very important thing is good health. I had everything set up and got a very serious cancer diagnosis. I’ve had complications for five years. I used to have a huge community veggie plot but had to give it up. So sad. I had it for 20 years. Someone benefited from all my hard work. I still have the small home yard. But it was set up as fruit tree guilds. So is now pretty shady to grow most vegetables. But I squeeze them in all over. So take care of your health. Running back and forth for surgeries and appointments is very tiring. This is the first spring I’m feeling a bit more active and can do things. But because it was permacultured things got messy but nothing died. No even me. Ha ha.

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy  Год назад +1

      What a great outlook you have, no doubt rooted in how centered you have become by living this lifestyle for decades. I wish you all the best in your recovery!

  • @cummerou1
    @cummerou1 Год назад +22

    Great video as always. I'm reminded of my own country of Denmark, claim to be green this, green that, but we emit 300% more co2 per KWh than France does, due to a lack of nuclear power. The government thinks that setting ambitious goals (that always fail) is the same as actually doing something, and don't get me started on how rapidly our biodiversity and animal populations are decreasing.
    I especially agree that there won't be a sudden collapse as many predict, but instead food and fuel will rapidly increase in price and take up a large quantity of people's income. From 2020-2023 food prices have increased by 20 -30% where I live, and still haven't gone down yet, fuel prices are still double of what they used to be.
    Planting a garden so you can grow a large part of your own food is an extremely good investment, and if you have the space, planting trees for firewood.
    The aim of a garden shouldn't be to be 100% self sufficient for when the apocalypse comes, but to be mostly self sufficient so you're insulated from potentially large increases in prices and potential shortages.

  • @calabogierusticfarmmarket387
    @calabogierusticfarmmarket387 Год назад +12

    Hi and thanks for the words. This is a subject i have been thinking about a lot lately and you have put it all into prospective for me in one short video. WE have started our permaculture farm here in Calabogie Ont. About 4 years ago and it is coming along quite well. My wife and I have made this our full time business and we are working hard towards being able to provide food not only for our family but also the community. You have given me a much deeper vision towards the future of the environment and inevitably the economy. Hearing this put into words makes me want to work that much harder to make sure that we succeed with our vision. Thank you.

  • @kymeratale
    @kymeratale Год назад +14

    I am literally breaking ground on a permaculture orchard next week in zone 5b, eastern Ontario. Starting with a 1.25 acre plot and see how it goes. Once I did the plan I realized the huge amount of food a space that size can give.

  • @buzzyhardwood2949
    @buzzyhardwood2949 Год назад +8

    It took courage for you to post this. Thank you and keep fighting the good fight.

  • @nutequest
    @nutequest Год назад +4

    You’re on the money. Well done. I started my food forest, again 4 years ago. A fire took the first one out. We also have raised beds, utility chickens that we breed for meat and eggs and utility cattle for meat and milk. We also have a pony that we can drive in cart and ride. I’m legally blind and physically limited and my husband has acquired brain injury and physical limitations. But we are fairly healthy and active due to the hobbie farm and our work as body work therapists and studies, him acupuncture and me naturopath. We have very little money but our life is amazing! All it takes is a dream and then action.

  • @codzymajor
    @codzymajor Год назад +11

    Your passion is absolutely inspiring.
    Promote the 3 Bs: bees, birds, and butterflies.
    Grow fruit trees.
    Cover the earth.

  • @Teawisher
    @Teawisher Год назад +9

    So happy I met an Indonesian coffee farmer last summer who grows in a forest. She got me really interested in permaculture and no matter what happens I doubt the me in 15 years is not gonna be grateful for nuts and fruits. Especially if shit really goes down.
    I'm poor by my country's standards but lucky to be next to city owned areas that have tremendous potential for food forests. And parts of the area have pretty much no people visiting them.

  • @ImamMalikMujahid
    @ImamMalikMujahid Год назад +4

    Although I started my garden with your guidance last year, after watching this video I will devote more time to it and will get my relatives to get started on it.

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy  Год назад +1

      Hi Malik! How is the garden coming along? I'd love to see any pictures this summer if you remember to take some. It was such an honor to work with you. You are such an outstanding person. Namaste, friend.

    • @ImamMalikMujahid
      @ImamMalikMujahid Год назад

      @@CanadianPermacultureLegacy Salam. Under your guidance, my garden is growing well. will send you photos once there is a bit greener there. My son has fact-checked your presentation and found your whole set of information pretty accurate. Now the rest of the family is getting into thinking mode.

  • @vivalaleta
    @vivalaleta 11 месяцев назад +1

    Love your informed, progressive, important speech. Thank you

  • @Crina-LudmilaCristeaAuthor
    @Crina-LudmilaCristeaAuthor Год назад +7

    That asparagus is HUGE! I planted 10 crowns (5 green, 5 purple) a few weeks ago and the spears are starting to show now. I can't wait to taste them. I also planted a few fruit trees. I wish I could have planted more. Hpefully this autumn we will be able to plant more in the garden/food forest loading. I've made some experiments with mushrooms and we have to see if they will yield something or I have to do a better job next time. Take care!💛

  • @Bakedgardening
    @Bakedgardening Год назад +12

    I’ve never watched a more important video in my life,thanks dude🤘🌱❤️

  • @julie-annepineau4022
    @julie-annepineau4022 Год назад +11

    Started this journey a couple years ago. Bought the land and got 11 fruit trees, a large garden and some support perennials into the ground. Getting chickens this week! 9 More fruit trees bought and a few dozen attempted from seed. My hope is to be a resource and an example to those around me how rewarding this lifestyle is. Thanks for the explanation of how bad, why and when things are going to go down hill.

  • @annburge291
    @annburge291 Год назад +13

    I really like your 'It's going to change' series, so start getting ready. The present lack of water in a fifth of Mexico City has really shown that the people with a barrel and a means to move a barrel with a cart or wheel barrow have such an advantage over the families that turn up with large saucepans and buckets when the water tanker is distributing water weekly. Clean water storage is critical. Cleaning contaminated water is also important. Transportation that doesn't require petroleum is helpful. Any third world country shows the value of bikes, carts, barrows for moving people and goods. In times of crisis, employment takes a dive. How many skills or goods can we offer? Can we reduce our cost of living to balance with the income that we can generate when we are with no formal employment. How are we going to feed ourselves and perhaps our animals? It's all a process of trying to prepare. We need lots of ideas, more trust in our communities, sharing of resources, becoming more knowledgeable about options. I'm painfully aware how fragile my situation is. Every system I have set up has numerous weak links..

  • @karenw9996
    @karenw9996 Год назад +14

    A couple of things for those just getting started and/or with limited space: if you grow summer prune fruit trees to limit size they'll produce sooner, not as much, but sooner (read Grow A Little Fruit Tree for more information)...and although canning supplies, all of which come from large companies, were unavailable, not ALL seeds & nursery stock was out - only the LARGE companies ran out, small local & regional suppliers still had inventory, so I would encourage everyone to buy from them all the time so they stay in business!

    • @annburge291
      @annburge291 Год назад +6

      Only the seeds of food that perhaps we don't need to eat ran out. Dandelions (the original wild lettuce) still flowered in the lawns, amaranth and goose foot still grew along train lines, poplars and mulberry still gave leaves. The supermarkets still provided dried beans, pumpkins and coriander for planting... We can plant the stem base of celery, onion and cabbage and still get quite a few leaves out of them. Most of my wild broccoli seeds came out of the budgie seed waste that I planted when cleaning the cage...

    • @kymeratale
      @kymeratale Год назад

      A good strategy for limited space and a desire for fruit sooner is to plant fruit trees on dwarfing rootstock. They will yield sooner, but with the trade off that they don't live as long as standard trees.

    • @karenw9996
      @karenw9996 Год назад +1

      @@kymeratale Buying a full size tree and pruning aggressively in late spring/early summer will keep the trees small (smaller than dwarf, if you choose), they tend to begin producing in about three years rather than the usual 5-7, and they maintain the vigor & lifespan of the full size tree. My first apple was a semi-dwarf, subsequent trees of all fruit types I've bought larger trees and am keeping them pruned back...although I wouldn't need to, now that I'm older even dwarf trees will live as long as I will.

  • @helenloughrey7660
    @helenloughrey7660 Год назад +7

    Thank you. For this reminder. Was aware of all this in 2005 thanks to LATOC, ASPO, The Oil Drum, Transition Towns, etc. I have been skill building all this time.
    The 2008 crisis set me back for close to a decade, but in 2022 I finally got to a financial position to prep a food forest, yet everything is more expensive now.
    But at least now I know how to raise chickens, to grow & preserve produce, and to teach others. I enjoy practicing these skills.
    Earth care
    People care
    Share the surplus
    Waste nothing
    I do not think we have 7 years. Maybe 2 years.

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy  Год назад +3

      Amazing! Great work! I also agree, I kind of fudged on my estimate of the timeframe because when you tell people who are completely unplugged from all this, that massive changes are coming in less than a decade, they kind of think you are nuts. And really, changes WILL be coming, but it's also unlikely that many of the people who need to act will notice. The worst changes are happening to the most exploited people, and they will get hurt the most.
      I know so many people who are otherwise very kind and compassionate people, and their stance is something along the lines of "well, it will get a little warmer here so that's not so bad, eh, heheheh". It's so crazy how disillusioned people can be, and insensitive an otherwise kind empathetic person can be for someone's plight, caused by them and their choices, as long as they live in another part of the world.
      How to fight this, I don't know. This line of thinking is so pervasive, and it's everywhere.
      In about 100 years, we went from "It's a parent's job to make the world better for their children"
      to
      "Stop complaining you stupid kids, I got mine."

  • @melissaoleary8196
    @melissaoleary8196 Год назад +3

    Truth! I started my food forest 2 years ago. I'm planting as much as I can get my hands on. Change of life is coming.

  • @mareemarcolin3227
    @mareemarcolin3227 Год назад +7

    Well done. I started learning how to grow food 5 years ago. It brings me joy. In Australia’s north I know I can grow sweet potatoes and snake beans in our hottest weather - to date-. Permaculture water designs hopefully will help. Meanwhile my family are enjoying Home grown European style vegetables and my hens eggs. Good luck to all.

  • @maryobrien5568
    @maryobrien5568 Год назад +13

    Thank you so much for this very thorough and informative video. Thank you in particular for mentioning the Global South and the impacts of our extractive economic model on our fellow humans. They are now suffering the worst impacts of climate change and have done the least to deserve it.
    I have been a climate activist since 2018 and initially thought we could change the system through our efforts. I have since realised that the big corporations are too powerful and both activists and information are being increasingly suppressed and in some cases activists have even been killed. I am still involved in campaigning ( currently to try to stop approval by UK govt of Rosebank oilfield) but I have also moved my focus to trying to prepare my own community for what lies ahead. After a year of doing a weekly climate strike at my local shop, I have now got a group of people together to focus on adapting and mitigating climate change. It is still early days but we are looking at issues such as developing community owned energy projects ( eg hydro in the local river) food growing, a repair cafe, and working with businesses and food producers to support the local economy and food systems. At the moment there are only a few of us, but I am hopeful that once we become more visible others will join. We need to try to build this better world you envisage and strengthen our communities. This will help to mitigate the risk of civil unrest.
    Thank you again for what you are doing to raise awareness. It is very powerful.

  • @sarahogden3826
    @sarahogden3826 Год назад +3

    While I may not agree with everything you are suggesting the government ought to do about the impending crisis, I do agree with you on what we as individuals can do right now about it! Great advice. Seeing you stand out there in the rain talking about it is so encouraging and inspiring. Rain or shine, there is something we can do about it. We are not powerless in all this.

  • @NataBo_ru
    @NataBo_ru Год назад +11

    Hi, Keith! My English is not that good to understand every single word in this video, but I still got the message and now I'm even more encouraged to start a food forest than before. Thank you for revealing this topic, not only gardening itself.

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy  Год назад +2

      That's amazing because your written English is better than most native English speakers! Not just this comment, but all your previous ones.
      I'm glad you enjoyed this one! I needed to end the winter series of videos with a message of hope and action.

    • @ankanowakowska8388
      @ankanowakowska8388 Год назад +1

      You can turn on subtitles in your language on these YT videos

  • @brooketeague4985
    @brooketeague4985 Год назад +2

    This makes me think back to my 19 y/o self talking to the Dr I was working for at the time....Sitting across a desk from him, I tell him how I am giving my two weeks notice. I have plans to move into a agricultural commune to learn skills in self-sufficiency. He asks why I would want to quit my job (training as an ophthalmic tech) to go break a sweat every day. I mentioned how I want to be prepared when there is no more food in the grocery stores. He literally laughed at me. He could not imagine a time when you can’t go to the store to get what you need. I didn’t care for the commune so I left after a while....but I dis gather skills and kindled a fire under my butt to be self-reliant in terms of food and energy. This was 12 years ago! Now I have a functional homestead, grow 100% of my own meat, I usually break a sweat every day and have dirt under my nails. I met a wonderful man who has the same goals! Save your seeds folks!

  • @cb-tc9lw
    @cb-tc9lw Год назад +8

    I love your perspective Keith. Not only your perspective but how you bring together a number of different sources from the engineer perspective. You are awesome and your videos are amazing. Thank you.

  • @shawnmurphy234
    @shawnmurphy234 Год назад +12

    As a fellow engineer, I love the way you present this material. You’re covering a ton of ground with deep, yet often hidden connections. Somehow it all hangs together perfectly. Also, you avoid the alarmist politicking, but still arrive at a clear call to action. Bravo. Thank you!

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy  Год назад +6

      Thank you so kindly. This is all coming from literally hundreds of books, podcasts, studying from experts. I just love this stuff, I binge it on the way to work, for 20 years now. I find the limits of growth so fascinating, because I think its the ONLY thing that matters, and nobody is talking about it.
      People always just focus on single areas. Climate change. Carbon. Oil. Financial systems. Food. But these things are all interconnected and deeply interwoven. It's impossible to fix climate change for example, without fixing how capitalism serves only GDP, and GDP ignores environmental externalities.
      It's impossible to fix industrial farming practices, without considering government taxation, subsidies, and funding.
      It's impossible to prepare for the end of oil, without fixing our centralized food systems.
      It's impossible to fix overshoot and consumption, without addressing "engineering to failure for max profits".
      I could go on and on and on, it's literally all a giant mess of spaghetti on a global plate.

  • @tyroneglaum771
    @tyroneglaum771 Год назад +12

    I love watching this guy. He's is really knowledgeable. I recently subscribed to this channel and am very glad I have. I've learned a lot, and the information he gives everyone kinda is the missing piece of the puzzle, sort of say. I recommend all kinds of people watch and learn as much as they can from this guy.

  • @renatehaeckler9843
    @renatehaeckler9843 Год назад +13

    Thank you for this wake-up call. I heard this same message 15 years ago, we haven't really made any progress since then, lately I've been distracted by all the human rights issues, so environmental issues and peak oil kind of fell off my radar, tho it's all intertwined really because the poor and minorities will suffer the most. One thing I've realized since buying the farm is that livestock are not something you can do "self-sufficiently", without oil for fertilizer, gas for tractors, etc. because they all need to eat, and usually it's either grain or hay and hand-harvesting enough hay to feed a single cow through winter is more work than most people would be willing to do.

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy  Год назад +4

      Have you looked into setting up silvopasture? It's a 10 year investment, but is a good way to at least minimize how many inputs you need. A really good resource on it is obviously Alan Savory, but a younger person actively doing these things is Darby Simpson.

    • @awakenacres583
      @awakenacres583 Год назад +3

      I have way too many chickens and ducks and I agree with you. It’s way more work and resources than most people realize. I do enjoy their company but they are not sustainable, especially in colder climates.

    • @cannabinerd9665
      @cannabinerd9665 Год назад +1

      If a half hour every day or two isn't too much check into hair sheep. They can get pretty close to being self sufficiently and even profitably raised with proper management.

  • @amyxhomestead
    @amyxhomestead Год назад +1

    I planted fruit trees last year to start a food forest. This year is the veggie garden. Next year, herbs and berries.

  • @thehillsidegardener3961
    @thehillsidegardener3961 Год назад +4

    Thank you for this, it's a very clear picture of where we are headed. We are like a bunch of lemmings in a school bus hurtling towards a cliff (mixed my metaphors a bit there), blithely looking out the window enjoying the ride. EVEN if your predictions are overly pessimistic and economic growth will continued relatively unabated for the foreseeable future, I really want to continue downsizing our lifestyle (which is pretty modest anyway) and I want my older kids to watch this video. because this is going to affect them. I am really bad at growing annuals (partly because of our very hot and dry summer climate), I don't think we could ever feed ourselves that way, and I am not sure our 1/4 acre of land is sufficient to sustain our family even if I could grow enough fruit and vegetables. But having settled for a fairly modest lifestyle I think we could weather the coming storms, even as we have so far weathered the huge price increases we have recently seen - when you mostly feed yourself with fruit and veg from the farmer's market and the minimum of industrially-produced products, the blow to your budget is not nearly as great. But your comments about the lack of expertise in renewable energy (e.g. nuclear) got me thinking - do you think that is a viable career path I could suggest to my kids, whether on the engineering side or somewhere else? I think they need to start thinking about the 21st-century economy and what it's going to hold for them, and I feel a lot of the traditional career paths are going to offer less opportunities - I can sense the impending change in my own industry (translation services) with the rise of AI tools...

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy  Год назад +2

      Absolutely. that's where I'm steering my kids. If there is one educated path worth pursuing, I think its anything that will help develop the future world, where a certification or degree is required. That's not only things like engineering, but also more hands on skills, the skilled labour to do it, welding, pipefitting, electrician, etc.

  • @renatehaeckler9843
    @renatehaeckler9843 Год назад +7

    One thing about trees, tho, is that we haven't had a fruit harvest from ours for 4 years now. With the climate instability, the trees bloom too early then blossoms are killed by a late frost, or one year we had two 6-week periods of almost no rain that resulted in the trees dropping their fruit and nuts and no harvest then either. Cane fruits are doing well, I think bushes and brambles might be the way to go. I guess if you want fruit trees, pick ones that bloom late.

    • @donnavorce8856
      @donnavorce8856 Год назад +4

      Reply mostly for general readers: Do the research and at least attempt to select ones that can, in most years, thrive and produce. If you can afford it buy a close range of trees - a few for more north climate and one or two for south climate; The bulk for your climate as it theoretically is at present. In the mid west US where I live it's hotter and drier now. And just as you mentioned, late freezes are taking out blossoms and fruit embryos more often now than just ten years ago. I've got an oak tree that is never fooled so am learning to harvest acorns for consumption. Apples are pretty dependable too and store for long periods of time. You probably know all this anyway. But it's good to know you're out there and I'm not alone.

    • @debbiehenri345
      @debbiehenri345 Год назад +2

      I had the same problem with plum trees last year. Every single bloom was frosted. In fact, they're blooming right now and there are 2 consecutive frosty mornings forecast for the end of the week. So they'll be gone again.
      But 2021, best harvest ever. One plum tree was so laden, I wonder it didn't break. So I view the years of frosted blooms as a bit of a break for them. Let them recharge and hang some strawberries in hanging baskets off the empty limbs.
      I initially started my food forest with fruit bushes - gooseberries (3 colours), currants (3 colours), raspberries (now in 5 different colours), thornless blackberries, blueberries, honeyberries.
      These don't seem to be bothered by late frosts. Some of the Blueberries have already bloomed throughout at least 2 or 3 frosty mornings, and not one of the flowers were affected, even if a few leaves fell off.

    • @rainbowconnected
      @rainbowconnected Год назад +3

      Seeing plants thwarted by weird weather is rough. Really considering microclimates in your space can help some with the late frost part. Possibly planting in areas that tend to stay colder might delay blooming till a safer time. If you have the space, planting in several different microclimates so that whatever the weather, you hopefully have at least one tree fruit. Obviously that only goes so far, but worth a shot. I think you're right that bushes and brambles are a good way to hedge your bets, if you will.

    • @lilanield9203
      @lilanield9203 Год назад

      I think having a wide variety of fruits is key. That way different weather patterns affect different plants differently and some may produce more and some less in any given year.

  • @63SpaceGirl
    @63SpaceGirl Год назад +4

    You have a beautiful background with the waterfalls & pond ❤

  • @harmonysalem9377
    @harmonysalem9377 Год назад +1

    Merci from Montreal, Canada.

  • @tanyadraper7588
    @tanyadraper7588 Год назад +8

    Glad I started my food forest 3 years ago haven't gotten much out of it yet except for beauty but it's coming along

    • @debbiehenri345
      @debbiehenri345 Год назад +3

      It won't take long. I started mine with the dependable, quick-producing fruit bushes: gooseberries, currants, raspberries, thornless blackberries.
      This selection propagates so easily (I started propagating from the most vigorous shrubs just 18 months after planting). Now, several years later, I have hundreds in place of the half dozen I started with.
      The fruit trees, blueberries, honeyberries and those plants that are more challenging to propagate, I acquired very slowly to begin with. But when the pandemic struck, I think that was my 'real' wake-up call, and I knew then I would really have to buckle down and start planting seriously.
      Over the past 3 years, I have really diversified as well as acquired a good deal more of the usual choices. I'm thinking that it's perfectly possible for the weather to swing to one extreme and then to another from year to year, so if one harvest fails - I can depend on another.

  • @michelfournier2683
    @michelfournier2683 Год назад +5

    Thanks once again Keith, now if we can convince everyone of the importance of cutting back on our goods consumption, difficult to do when the politicians are basing their debt recovery through growth in the Gdp, = increase in production of goods.

  • @waterjade4198
    @waterjade4198 Год назад +7

    I think we also need to learn how to utilize what nature provides in abundance. Learning how to identify, eat/use eat our "weeds". Weeds grow more easily than crop plants because crop plants were selected by humans to grow based on our preferences. Whereas a weed's hardiness comes from the evolutionary need to survive through any climate condition it may encounter. A weed will grow more easily and in larger abundance and provides a wider and higher range of nutritional value than crop plants selected by humans.
    I'm not saying that we should ignore gardening, but we should keep in mind that we have been provided an alternate food source for centuries that most people have been ignoring.

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy  Год назад +4

      This is absolutely why I've been transitioning away from annuals and mostly grow native perennials. I'm designing less of a garden here, and more of a forest that I forage from.

  • @suenavivedisfruta558
    @suenavivedisfruta558 Год назад +2

    Is so rewarding to go to your garden and harvest from it,to eat. I started my food forest 12 yesterday ago and now is thriving. Thanks for the advice. I did it for better health and to eat organic food.

  • @BarnBootsandCountryRoots
    @BarnBootsandCountryRoots Год назад +11

    Great video! I’m so proud of you and how you’ve turned this new interest in gardening into something that has brought so much purpose to your life, and knowledge and inspiration to so many people around the world. Grandma would have been so happy to see what you’ve accomplished with your gardens. I think so many people feel like they don’t have a green thumb and can’t get started, but they don’t realize that was exactly like you… and look at you now, just 7 years later! So proud of you! ❤

    • @annburge291
      @annburge291 Год назад +3

      I'm sure Keith is proud of you guys as well. Another video of your place would be great.

    • @annburge291
      @annburge291 Год назад

      @My Cancer Journey Really study Thomas Syfreid, Cancer as a metabolic disease. People following his recommendations are having success

    • @annburge291
      @annburge291 Год назад

      @My Cancer Journey ruclips.net/video/GuIk3qR-ws8/видео.html

    • @annburge291
      @annburge291 Год назад +3

      @@maruiacancer a quick summary of the metabolic cancer protocol is learn to fast because cancer cells live off glucose and glutamine. First one month Ramadan dry fasting ( Eating before dawn, nothing in the day, not even water and at dusk a small meal. You can drink during the night) Ramadan dry fasting is the equivalent of three days water only fasting. Eat lots of cancer fighting foods such as cruciferous vegetables, tumeric, ginger, garlic, green tea, blue berries and quite a bit of fat (coconut oil, olive oil, avocado, MTC oil if you don't eat animal foods) because cancer cells can't use ketones. It's desirable to be in ketosis. Then you try five days water and salt only fasting. Then have a month of one meal a day. Now try one month water and salt only fasting. Most cancers cannot survive this total lack of glucose and glutamine. For what ever reason you cannot fast because of being very underweight, extremely weak, old... there is a pulsed drug protocol of blocking insulin with abendazol (antiworm medication) and DON (to block glutamine. You would need to get a MD on board for the medication route. All the best with your journey.

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy  Год назад +4

      So that comment is gone now, but apparently that person stole the actual other person's account and is now using it to funnel money into a fake foundation. If anyone sees their comment pop back up, please be very careful with clicking links and donating money. When in doubt, donate money to known charities that put the most money possible towards the people who need it, and avoid giving directly to individuals.

  • @pilatesmeditation8762
    @pilatesmeditation8762 Год назад +2

    Thank you for your video. Here in UK England is almost impossible to buy a piece of land. I do have an allotment which belongs to the town council, but you never know when they will decide to build houses here as it is a shortage of land. Makes me sad for future generations. Lina

  • @lgrantsimmons
    @lgrantsimmons Год назад +2

    At 67 years of age, I remember when we all grew our own food and nothing came in plastic containers. Keith is right - start now no matter where you live. If you are a city dweller in an apartment building, explore the indoor growing systems now available. Turn your balcony into a garden. If you have land, switch to as many perennial crops as possible and start saving your annual vegetable crop seeds. Live like your grandparents and the world will be a better place. Be responsible for your own future.

  • @romeowhiskey4034
    @romeowhiskey4034 Год назад +4

    Been a Prepper since 2015. 2019 I purchased my biggest prep yet.. land. I started watching your videos a year ago and am already working towards food security. Because I believe that something will happen such as economic collapse and quite possibly worse than the Great Depression.
    One of my biggest fears is the talk that the government doesn’t want people living in rural areas.. they want them penned in these 15 minute cities where they can be monitored and controlled. Everything that you’ve worked so hard for to provide for your family will just be confiscated by the government

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy  Год назад +7

      I'm honestly not afraid of having eminent domain used on my land. I think the walkable cities discussion is valid, and the main goal is to reduce the need for cars, because the government knows that:
      1) Oil collapse is here, and imminent
      2) Energy infrastructure to support a change to EVs isn't possible in the timeframe needed.
      So the goal is to create Amsterdam style cities where cars aren't needed.
      I honestly don't see anything nefarious in this, I think its an important part of the transition. Without it there will be catastrophic collapse. But I don't think anyone will be forced to do anything. I truly don't.

    • @bookswithatwist-vanvelzerp9262
      @bookswithatwist-vanvelzerp9262 Год назад

      @@CanadianPermacultureLegacy I hope that is true - I know not all can afford it -but if living rural - bikes and horses could be a wonderful alternative to cars ! :)

    • @rileynicholson2322
      @rileynicholson2322 11 месяцев назад +1

      15 minute cities aren't a prison. They are just a regular city where you can walk to the grocery store within 15 minutes instead of being forced to drive several kilometers to get milk or vegetables. Before the absurd practice modern single use zoning, where we forced everyone who wanted more than 2 bedrooms to live in a suburban wasteland instead of near their job, "15 minute cities" were completely normal and just called cities.
      Also why wouldn't the government want people living in rural areas? Cities are so much harder to politically (or militarily) dominate than rural areas. Cities were the birthplace of democracy and continue to be bastions of liberty. If you're worried about an authoritarian government, you should be worried they will start trying to encourage people to live in small cities and work camps that can be easily controlled.

  • @fourdayhomestead2839
    @fourdayhomestead2839 18 дней назад +1

    Deeply cutting back on the use of energy in human lifestyles would be something to consider along with more sustainable production.

  • @KateEileen
    @KateEileen Месяц назад

    I live in NY state, which is one of the more progressive states for green energy. They’re aiming for no new construction that uses natural gas within the next few years, and transitioning all existing natural gas powered heating to electric within a few years after that. It’s great in theory, but I was recently talking with a guy who works as a green energy consultant and he said much the same - we don’t have the energy grid to handle that, and need to find alternatives. Hoping we will find a way, and in the meantime, every little bit of energy use reduction, and communities learning to work together helps!

  • @suebar5177
    @suebar5177 Год назад +6

    Thanks Keith...now I have another reason why I need a greenhouse 😊

  • @debbiecasalina4475
    @debbiecasalina4475 Год назад +1

    I would love to get rid of all my grass, I hate mowing! I love to garden, been doing it for years, learning more and more watching RUclips videos, thanks for your videos, just found you, subscripted! I will be binge watching your playlist! Also like learning from offgrid with Doug and Stacy!

  • @pollywaara8737
    @pollywaara8737 Год назад +8

    I truly appreciate the effort you put into these videos relating to expected changes in climate that will necessitate changes in the way we live. Thanks also for drawing attention to inequities within societies and how actions within a society can negatively impact other parts of the world.
    From the first video of yours that I watched 2-3 years ago, I knew your style of gardening meshed well with my hopes for my small city lot. Last June my son bought a house with an acre of turf grass on top of hardpan clay. They are letting me take charge of creating a large natural area and a vegetable garden I envision a cohesive permaculture lot including fruits and vegetables as well as native trees, shrubs and plants to support wildlife.
    I have struggled with with the clay and have the beginnings of a garden. On your advice, I collected mountains of leaves from the neighborhood last fall. I need a plan for the next few years to include retaining rainwater that now runs into a drainage ditch behind their property. I think I need a landscaper to give quotes on creating berms and swales.
    If you have any suggestions on how to move forward, I would love to hear them. You have done beautiful work to create a bountiful and family-friendly space. This job requires more knowledge than I have gleaned in years of gardening in my small city lot with loose, black soil.
    Thanks again for all your gardening videos AND for videos sharing your concerns for the entire earth. This video has given me more determination to work effectively in creating a permaculture yard for my son's family. (Sorry this got so long.)

    • @annburge291
      @annburge291 Год назад +3

      Our property out of the city had two metres of topsoil mined off it for building mudbricks for houses in the area and to use for leveling the surrounding pecan orchards. They then sold off the funny wedge shaped strip hole to ignorant suckers like us with the promise of water and electricity... but then backed out and left us looking at flood irritation over the fence. We were left with machine compacted clay and heavily salted caliche (commonly known as natural cement)...So my methods have been supporting and planting mezquites (so called nitrogen fixers) in rings because their roots can drill down through the clay. Sometimes I sacrifice the mezquites by cutting them of at ground level and covering with cardboard and sawdust before planting a fruit tree such as peach but more often I leave the mezquites until the fruit trees can survive the dogs. I'm constantly making compost with sawdust in the chicken coop and sawdust in a bottomless water tank for treating dog poo and humanure. With this compost I use as a slurry to water the hole when planting fruit trees. Our water from a well is extremely alkaline. Our apple and plum trees tend to become mineral deficient even when applying compost. I am trying to rectify this with foliar spray made from eggshells soaked in vinegar (I use a tsp to a litre of water). We did bring in an excavator to dig two long trenches through the property and I gradually filled them with mezquite branches brought in from the highway, tumble weed, cardboard... I let most of the grass and weeds grow even if they are prickly and poisonous. In a desert environment everything takes a long time and there are many false starts and failures. My biggest helpers have ironically been voles, rats and squirrels. They dig tunnels 40 cms under the surface from tree well to tree well and that helps spread water underground all over the property. The result is that with rhizome grasses, our whole property now looks green. All the best with your clay. Remember that clay is much easier than course sand.

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy  Год назад +1

      Such a fantastic response Ann!
      Just keep planting and keep tapping into any free source of organic matter that you can. Those are the 2 secrets.

  • @tonyamiller4045
    @tonyamiller4045 Год назад +9

    Well put together, informative and really unbiased with respect to conserv/lib politics. People are largely blind to these issues. .Started growing my fruit trees a few years ago, have veg beds, and need more fruiting shrubs! These skills should be taught in school.

  • @robfj3414
    @robfj3414 Год назад +10

    This was concise, direct and straight up brilliant!
    We’ve been following the channel for a while since, being also in Ontario, so many of your guidelines and climate experiences apply to us as well.
    But this eye opening presentation was necessarily direct.
    Keep up the good work, Keith.
    You’re an inspiration to all of us to try that much harder to make the world, an our own food gardens, a better place.

  • @donnavorce8856
    @donnavorce8856 Год назад +3

    When the power goes off we won't be able to hear from this speaker. (It's a long walk to Canada to visit.) Better start your food forest now because once you really need it it'll be way too late. Get going fellow earthlings. Cheers

  • @iamthewelcher
    @iamthewelcher Год назад +3

    ...I started about 2 years ago, and this will be my 3rd season gardening. I've been going Hard at it...dozens of fruit trees, all the standard permaculture edibles, berry's, nuts, chickens, just got quail. I can tell you , as of Now, I don't feel ready, at least not total collapse(what I see coming) ...and "running out" of petro? That's maybe the one thing I hadn't considered!! That makes sense brother. It really does. The bigs would know that, they will want to preserve their lifestyles, and so FAR less consumers would actually be in their interests...

  • @waykeeperfarmandnerdery
    @waykeeperfarmandnerdery Год назад +3

    I freaking love you for everything you are sharing in this video. We need to change how we operate in the world - away from consuming in a capitalist system, and toward stewarding, nurturing, and producing food, biodiversity, and community. So spot on!

  • @bonniepoole1095
    @bonniepoole1095 Год назад +8

    A concise and reasonable explanation of years of eco-economics and the changes that are beginning now. Thank you!

    • @jeffk464
      @jeffk464 Год назад +2

      Yes and he's either right or he's wrong, one or the other. I don't have a problem growing your own food but if he's right you need rice, beans, eggs, chicken etc. You can't really live off fruit. Also if your neighbors are starving, they are going to be going after your food. Its really a no win situation.

  • @OG-Everthing
    @OG-Everthing Год назад +2

    Ok my man ... I'm in, let's go!
    I'll be back in 7 years inshallah and I'll tell you about my food forest
    Thank you my friend

  • @homesteadhaven6024
    @homesteadhaven6024 Год назад +5

    Good Morning Keith! Thank you again for another wise and thoughtful discussion. I agree that we are all on a deadline and need to adapt, plan and learn if we want to thrive. As someone who teaches permaculture food growing I can say with encouraging certainty that there is a mass awakening afoot and you are a driving force in it. Learners are appearing out of nowhere and starting farming co-ops, community groups and food preserving/medicine-making circles to improve our wellness and become more sustainable. It’s mind blowing for homesteaders like us because 5 years ago our work was novelty. Now however, our efforts are proving to be necessary.
    As municipalities begin to enforce this contraction with restrictive bylaws for homesteaders and our operations we need to get creative and bond with our neighbours. So grateful to have you in this beautiful country of ours and for all you do to encourage (and warn) us all of the changes ahead. ❤

  • @SgtScourge
    @SgtScourge Год назад +3

    Just got some lawn replacement from your affiliate link 😊 Had to look around at a few videos to find it!

  • @cannabinerd9665
    @cannabinerd9665 Год назад +4

    One thing that I'd suggest is to try and learn about organics. Not as a political ideology or anything, but as a way of raising food on your own without having to buy the necessary inputs such as fertilizer at a store. With just a little bit of learning and a little bit of work it's very possible to close the loop and stop buying the nutrients needed to continue to produce food year after year and create those inputs all yourself.

  • @melissaroot1092
    @melissaroot1092 Год назад +3

    I am putting in 2 apple trees today and 400 asparagus plants in May❤

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy  Год назад +2

      Oh wow that's some asparagus! I just put in 100 more myself, because we didn't have nearly enough.

    • @lilanield9203
      @lilanield9203 Год назад +1

      @@CanadianPermacultureLegacy How may asparagus per person would you suggest? Most places online say 5-20 per person. What is your take?

    • @melissaroot1092
      @melissaroot1092 Год назад +1

      Start with 20 per person, save for the winter, give away lots and sell the rest.

  • @ecocentrichomestead6783
    @ecocentrichomestead6783 Год назад +8

    Speaking of the reusable lids for canning. It seems there's a wide spread belief, in north america, that canning lids are not reusable. If carefully removed, those lids can be used many times over.
    I have my garden well underway, as you know. I'm collecting canning supplies and working on my preservation skills and cooking from scratch skills.

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy  Год назад

      Interesting. How do you disinfect them? Just regular boiling or steaming?

    • @ecocentrichomestead6783
      @ecocentrichomestead6783 Год назад +4

      @@CanadianPermacultureLegacy just regular boiling. Same as disinfecting the bottles.

    • @garthwunsch
      @garthwunsch Год назад +4

      We’ve reused lids for years. Just inspect for damage. If they don’t seal, stick them in the fridge and use first. I recently watched a video from Italy I believe, where are the women were all gathering around a large communal canning pot, each one or adding their own bottles of preserves to the pot. They didn’t use pressure canners, or stack them up perpendicular or anything. They just piled them in and boiled them. Perhaps the occasional one did break or not seal but they could handle that quite easily. Another interesting thing I just came across was our ability to purchase those quick twist canning lids that have lugs instead of threads. A local store in Sudbury is going to start stocking common sizes to make them economically available.

  • @chefe2152
    @chefe2152 23 дня назад +1

    For last 10 years ive been telling my wife that when we buy house ,it has to have decent backyard. She said that she is not the one who going to mow the loan! Neither will i i said,i exactly told her ,that when shit hit the fan,we will at least have place to grow some of our food!
    When i moved to Canada from Europe 20 years a go, i was ,and still am perplexed with people absession with useless grass loans.If everyone just convert theirs grass to garden,we will have different reality,and maybe big grocery giants like Mr.Weston would not feel the needbto gauge people .

  • @shannonsexton8921
    @shannonsexton8921 Год назад +5

    I believe you... it's a shame that even the people I know that are willing to entertain the possibility cannot bring themselves to make any move towards being prepared. Head in the sand or living for today? I hate how selfish humanity appears to be. Thank you for your willingness to speak.

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy  Год назад +5

      In the end, it will only hurt them. If people thought the toilet paper run during covid was bad, they need to understand that this was just a baby test for the disruptions that are coming. And they are inevitable, because our current system ignores the fact that it's literally impossible to sustain.
      The longer we keep ignoring our collective overshoot, the more rapid the "adjustment" will be. And the people who are unprepared will literally starve.
      We can fix SO MUCH of what is coming by just getting as much of the food supply decentralized again.

    • @shannonsexton8921
      @shannonsexton8921 Год назад +2

      Interesting times await us 🤔

  • @thomaswolf6507
    @thomaswolf6507 Год назад +5

    Thank you for your time and engineering insights. I've been trying to find ways to upgrade existing tech for the very purpose of adaptation. Where I live in Wisconsin, we are seeing major weather abnormalities, historic flooding, and large 2/3 temperature swings in a day.
    Gardens suffered heavily last year and we didn't see the worst of it. It's much like the plants have no idea what to do while pests, disease/fungus and climate gets worse.

  • @alinamacmillan3018
    @alinamacmillan3018 Год назад +4

    I'm year 9 into my farm/garden. I will never lose the knowledge I've gained but my fear is about what kind of losses we could face even as permaculturalists - a bad drought - if there's simply no water what are you going to do? I know the idea is to have a diverse spread of species and something will make it, but it could be dire. Bad winds too, and even tornados seem to be increasing in our area (Ontario), you'd have to be unlucky but it would just take minutes for your trees and years of work to vanish. I guess that's why there needs to be a network of us! It's honestly scary to think about though, we are so vulnerable to the weather. I really appreciate your take and information tho

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy  Год назад +3

      Yeah, we lost some trees in the recent big wind storms this year and last. Thankfully, because I plant SO densely, we ended up okay. I had neighbours who lost every tree on their property (on my street!). It was so super scary that 7 years of nonstop work could get completely erased in one storm.

    • @alinamacmillan3018
      @alinamacmillan3018 Год назад +1

      @@CanadianPermacultureLegacy right?? I've never had storm anxiety like I do now that I have so much set up!! I am watching your other videos and seeing your peach trees, curious which varieties you have

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy  Год назад +1

      ruclips.net/video/5GrddntX4Jk/видео.html
      I have a video on that!

    • @alinamacmillan3018
      @alinamacmillan3018 Год назад

      @@CanadianPermacultureLegacy thank you!! Watching all your videos

  • @thebandplayedon..6145
    @thebandplayedon..6145 Год назад +2

    Great chat, I hope your message spreads.... I know I've been entirely ineffectual in doing so myself.... sigh... That's ok, in the end, I'm good with being the crazy lady who lives of grid.

  • @gregorys447
    @gregorys447 Год назад +3

    Thanks Keith! Starting year 3 and still growing on just under 1/4 acre! Hope grows🌳🌿🐝🌼🫐🍓🍇🍎

  • @timhammond4140
    @timhammond4140 Год назад +2

    Really appreciate your perspective and wisdom.

  • @coranyavreck6346
    @coranyavreck6346 Месяц назад +1

    Well done.
    (I agree with all, except your choice of head gear, haha! Greetings from your supportive "neighbour" in "Montreal".)

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy  Месяц назад

      😆 ❤️ in the garden, but 5 for fighting on the ice. After which we grab a beer and talk plants 🪴 😆 🤣 😂

  • @Growinginontario
    @Growinginontario Год назад +2

    Excellent informative video. We are in 3rd year, I’ve already converted 1 of the 10 acres of my property to grow a food forest and no dig garden. We have about 60 more trees from wiffletree and Treetime coming next week. I told my children that when I’ve finished converting the property to a food forest it will be of tremendous value.

  • @branchingoutpermaculturewi4766
    @branchingoutpermaculturewi4766 Год назад +1

    good information brother i smell what your cooking. as a minimalist i do what i can to lower all of my utility usage and with my food forest im trying like you to feed my whole family plus. great video

  • @Greentrees60
    @Greentrees60 Год назад

    I really appreciate your clear messaging here. This COULD come off as alarmist, and if a viewer interprets Keith unfairly it does. But he is right about the substantial economic change that comes from switching to solar/renewables. It IS necessary, but our economy is NOT designed for it, which means a GENUINE rethink of our energy use systems (aka how the economy and society functions). There is umportant work to be done to make sure the economic transition doesn’t result in mass suffering, and planting a garden is a GREAT way for individuals to lighten the load on systems while also partially protecting themselves.

  • @mybelovedchaos
    @mybelovedchaos Год назад +2

    So I should take a cruise now before I cant anymore? Deal!
    Thanks for another great video, the tone delivering this was perfect. No fear-mongering just facts.

  • @SAROXBAND
    @SAROXBAND Год назад +4

    We really appreciate the time you have taken to put videos like this one out there. We are following your guide and our life has changed. We just recently incorporated wood chips and wine cap pegs thanks to you! Keep spreading this knowledge. You are perpetuating life itself. 👏💫☀️🌎

  • @bruritter1164
    @bruritter1164 Год назад +2

    Thank you soooooooooooo much!

  • @Tennababy
    @Tennababy Год назад +2

    I have no space so starting pot garden of trees and berry bushes >:) hoping to get space one day

  • @CityPrepping
    @CityPrepping 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you. I’m trying to encourage my community with the same message.

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy  11 месяцев назад +1

      Every single person will understand this at some point. It's important that we get people to understand it while they still have time to get as self sufficient as possible. The more that people are self sufficient, the less of an issue it will be for the people who are truly prepared, in terms of defending against the desperate. Keep up the good work! 👍

  • @dustyflats3832
    @dustyflats3832 Год назад +2

    It’s sad. I’ve already realized it many years ago and the extreme weather and the changes we’ve had since Jan was/is extreme. I’m going back to in ground garden rows for cost savings, ease of irrigation and most needed to install hoops for various covers to get a harvest. There seems to be a huge amount of money spent on gardening these days. Our ancestors would flip if they seen the price tags.
    We just had over a 50*F temp swing from 90*F to snow.
    With all the electric I would hope nuclear is not the answer.
    It doesn’t help when we sell/lease our land to other countries like what AZ is experiencing and they use all our water to grow alfalfa in the desert to take the hay back to their country to feed their beef and now our farmer’s wells are dry.
    The permafrost is defrosting and that land is totally unusable and I feel a major reason why there is war right now.
    I see saving seeds from your plants extremely important because crop failures happen and the seed may not be available. Government takes WAY TOO LONG to act and Always have the cart before the horse.
    I’ve started my orchard and we have chickens after not having them for decades. Providing the weather doesn’t kill the plants we will have food. I need to find better land and more of it as we have inconsiderate neighbors with dirt bikes and a Very Slow to act local gvt.
    I was coming to the end of the video and you were taking the words from my head. And the fact I’m expanding my garden and was just going to start trying to figure out how to do that. The chickens aren’t big enough to scratch it up just yet. My fairly new lawnmower has the transmission out-not happy as it only had about 135 hours of flat mowing on it. And hope like heck something is done about the noise makers in neighborhood. I can’t take it and wish I had our 80 acres back.

  • @donnahansen3844
    @donnahansen3844 Год назад +1

    Thank you Keith for all that you do. I’ve been listening to some of Graeme Sait’s podcasts. The two of you give me hope of this message reaching the masses.

  • @patrickmurphy7485
    @patrickmurphy7485 Год назад +2

    Thanks

  • @awakenacres583
    @awakenacres583 Год назад +5

    I live in the US and I believe the right and left are two sides of the same coin. Biden is a typical politician who says what he needs to in order to get elected. Its important to look at politicians history and see if their actions match up to their words. I’m getting older now and most of the things I plant will be for someone else to enjoy and that’s fine with me.

  • @johnowens5342
    @johnowens5342 Год назад +3

    I love your video. I disagree with almost all your positions so I think I will watch a couple of more times and then post my reasons and hopefully have a respectful conversation.

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy  Год назад +1

      I appreciate the maturity in this response :)

    • @johnowens5342
      @johnowens5342 Год назад

      On Tesla's 2023 investor day video which is 3 hrs long a lot of information is given about this subject and either you or Elon are wrong because you say the opposite. You should watch it. The part about efficiency improvements by transition to electric indicates less energy will be needed not the doubling every 25 years you speak of.

    • @johnowens5342
      @johnowens5342 Год назад

      You Said Capitalism happened to be in charge at the time of oil. I think
      100% of Russians
      100% of Saudi Arabians
      100% of Chinese
      100% of Mexicans
      100% of Venezuelans
      (Just the short list)
      Disagree with you about who was in charge of their oil.

    • @johnowens5342
      @johnowens5342 Год назад

      You said The world doesn't care about going green under capitalism. Yet the most capitalistic guy on the planet is in the green industry, EV cars and advancements in battery technology that will make full electric a viable option. His name is Elon Musk.

    • @johnowens5342
      @johnowens5342 Год назад

      Peak oil passed in 2019
      If Trump wins next election within two year that will not be true. Peak oil is at the moment an issue of policy not resources (politicking).

  • @karenkoerner6015
    @karenkoerner6015 Год назад +3

    Clearly stated. Thank you.

  • @LaVikinga108
    @LaVikinga108 Год назад +1

    Thank you!

  • @adrienmicollet991
    @adrienmicollet991 Год назад +3

    Thank you for this video

  • @Stewart7516
    @Stewart7516 2 месяца назад +1

    I just wanted to make a point on one of the things you spoke about, which is the avian flu that we recently experienced. While it was a serious scenario it didnt have to be. A large part of the issue was lack of flock genetic diversity. These viruses often affect different strains of say "chickens" differently. While for Example lets say Rhode Island Reds are hardly affected on the other hand Leghorn flocks may be devastated. The industry is the problem. They line breed for certain traits and in so doing ignore weaknesses. I have taken to mixing my favorite breeds and culling the week or sickly and dor the most part let the other traits sort themselves out. I have some birds that lay 6 days a week and some that lay 4 or 5 some lay large eggs some lay small eggs, some are brown some are blue and some are white. Some quit laying in the middle of winter while others arnt affected much. My point is ad diversity and redundancy into your homestead. This way your much more resilient and able to weather the coming storm. I would love to see you do a video about genetic and biodiversity in plants, trees and livestock. I feel like this is where so many people are coming up short and its mostly due to ignorance. Take care and keep teaching!

    • @CanadianPermacultureLegacy
      @CanadianPermacultureLegacy  2 месяца назад

      Exactly right. Unfortunately capitalism demands that only the fittest survive, which means ALL industries will industrialize and min/max for ONE factor only: profits. So when we do that, we lose any resiliency that diversity brings, because if there's a single breed of chicken that grows a little bigger, a little faster, or can be produced a little cheaper, then that's exactly what they'll do, and it is also the only thing they'll do, especially when the competition has driven the prices so low that nobody else can compete. It's compete or die, so we industrialize and min/max. We don't think about the environment, we don't think about health, we only think about cost/profit.

  • @dominiquedeveaux361
    @dominiquedeveaux361 Год назад +1

    Hi Keith,
    I hope this message finds you well. I find you very inspirational. I started viewing your videos a few years ago, and I can say in earnest that they've been instrumental in my journey of acquiring the tools to fight off cynicism and despair.
    I've continued my studies and today was my first day working in the nuclear industry (it was awesome!), and I can't help but see parallels between your situation and mine. Oh, and I'll be planting fruit trees this summer 🙂.
    Thank you for caring, thank you for telling the truth, and thank you for acting like the truth is real.
    Best regards,
    - Dominique

  • @dion8962
    @dion8962 Год назад +2

    Most of us live in apartment buildings surrounded by asphalt

    • @thisorthat7626
      @thisorthat7626 Год назад +1

      Microgreens, grow herbs in pots, see if you can find someone with land nearby where you can help them with a garden. Think outside the box and save until you can buy some land. Things are changing quickly. Land will be cheaper as banks foreclose on properties.

  • @maxmax1105
    @maxmax1105 11 часов назад

    thank!!!!

  • @leoscheibelhut940
    @leoscheibelhut940 Год назад +1

    The US Navy is the world's largest trainer of nuclear specialists, they used to train hundreds of nuclear specialists of all sorts every year, now the number is only dozens. I like the idea of putting small nuclear plants in retired coal plants, is that a complete pipe dream?
    Your economic observations and predicted outcomes are truly frightening, and most likely largely correct.

  • @tammynguyen6975
    @tammynguyen6975 Год назад +1

    Hi Keith, I haven't commented on your video for a while. Thank you for ending the winter season (at your area) with such a hopeful and powerful message. Community resilience is the best preparation for worst case as you and many wondetful comments have mentioned. I have started to pay more attention to collecting seeds. I have given away lots of seeds and seedlings to my colleagues so everyone in my team can have some plants similar to mine. I often joke that if any of the plants die, we have a backup plant somewhere in another garden 😂.
    I have made citrus vinegar spray in a big jar at work and have encourae colleagues to use it to clean kitchen brenches. I have not seen a store bought spray bottle for quite some time in our kitchen. To help mask the vinegar scent I have used one 2 drop essential oil. Everyone seems happy using the spray.
    A colleague of mine gave me a jar of chilli jam as I gave them so much chillies. They now have there own chillies plants as well from some chilli seeds😂.
    Please keep up the great work, Keith. Wr appreciate you very much 💚🌻🙏.

  • @MQ-cw9qx
    @MQ-cw9qx Год назад +2

    Fantastic video. Thank you.

  • @christelpeeples296
    @christelpeeples296 Год назад +2

    Thank you for this informative video, you are right on if only my familie woud listen to this.