Permaculture. Course. 12 Principles of Permaculture - Introduction to Permaculture. What is Permaculture? Discover the 12 Principles of Permaculture in this free online course. Learn about permaculture design, holistic permaculture, and how to apply these principles in permaculture projects. This Permaculture course in Galicia gives you a solid introduction to social permaculture and its importance in sustainability. Enjoy this free permaculture course and start your journey towards a more ecological garden design!
Chapters of the Introduction to Permaculture Course:
00:04 Introduction
00:17 Bill Mollison
02:40 Masanobu Fukuoka
03:46 What is Permaculture
05:52 History of Permaculture
07:50 Inefficiencies of the current agri-food system
10:05 Principles of permaculture. Design Principles in Permaculture
11:22 Principle 1. Observe and interact
15:16 Principle 2. Capture and store energy
18:23 Principle 3. Get a return
20:56 Principle 4. Self-regulation and feedback
23:45 Principle 5. Use and value renewable resources and services
28:32 Principle 6. Stop producing waste
32:50 Principle 7. Design from general patterns to the smallest details
36:11 Principle 8. Integrate better than segregate
39:35 Principle 9. The use of slow, small and progressive solutions
42:57 Principle 10. Use and value diversity
44:28 Principle 11. Edge effect. Use the edges and value the marginal
47:26 Principle 12. Use and respond creatively to change
48:54 Holistic permaculture
49:16 Elements and functions
51:19 Sustainability
52:59 Food forest. Food Forest. food forest
56:19 Farewell and closing
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Welcome to Permaculture in Galicia, my name is Enrique Llanes, I am a permaculture designer and today we wanted to do a small introductory video workshop to permaculture. We would like to start with a phrase said by the one we consider the father of permaculture, whose name is Bill Mollison, he is a professor, a doctor in biology from the University of Melbourne, who together with his student David Holmgren, who was doing a thesis On this topic, they systematize the set of tools that make up the discipline we know as permaculture.
We would like to start with a quote from him that translates as, although the world's problems are increasingly complex, the solutions remain embarrassingly simple. With this, Bill Mollison wants to tell us that the key to our stay on the planet and our personal interrelationships as individuals and as a group, is really in the type of relationship we have and that we exercise with our environment. Another of Bill Mollison's phrases, which I consider key to reflecting on and helping us understand what we mean by permaculture, is, you don't have a snail problem, what you have is a duck deficiency.
What do you mean by that? That in permaculture we do not face one of the problems known as pests, which is a name for another totally anthropomorphic species, such as weeds, what I mean by this, is that it is a name not for that species as a whole and in the ecosystem interaction of that species, but in relation to the extractivist and productivist mentality of humans. So what it tells us is, you don't have a snail problem, what you don't have are enough ducks, thus referring to a pest control system or one of the principles of pest control systems in permaculture, that is not of attacking that so-called pest, that species that is out of balance in the ecosystem, but rather introducing improvements in that ecosystem so that its predators can live there and those predators will carry out and promote biological control of that pest in a natural way. .
Another of these great fathers or contributors to this discipline is a Japanese scientist, a high-level scientist from the Japanese government named Masanobu Fukuoka, he was a scientist specialized in the study of pests and genetics, who reached a point in his professional career, he decides that this approach does not fulfill him and decides to move to the cherry production fields that his family had for ancestral generations in the mountains of Japan.
Masanobu Fukuoka has a very short phrase, but for me loaded with meaning, which says, observe nature deeply before starting to work without meaning, observe before intervening, is what he is telling us, spend some time sitting in the environment that you try to modify, study the relationships of that ecosystem before intervening on that ecosystem. We know permaculture after all, what we want...
www.permacultureingalicia.com/
Music: Artlist
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