JohnB wrote:contadino wrote:I've got news for you John. Compost toilets, water cleaning & reuse, rocket stoves, and solar cookers, and quick crops were around hundreds of years before Permaculture training courses. Sustainable building was the norm a few hundred years ago.
Many of the techniques aren't new. They're relearning, and adapting, things that were done for centuries, and have been lost in the last century or so.
It's a way of bringing these techniques back into use, and improving on them, in a planned way, rather that just being done on a small scale by one or two people, while the rest of the world collapses trying to maintain BAU.
Not IME. Monty Don met plenty of people using 'the old ways' in his Round the World in 80 Gardens series. The Argentinian who lives near me understands all about Terra Preta, Adobe building, berms, canopies, etc.. I've learnt loads from him. He tells me that these things are commonplace in Latin & Central America.
There is a network of Villagi Ecologici in Italy who use many of the techniques discussed in the permaculture books. One near me was founded by a group of Berliners, and is now a mix of a dozen or so nationalities.
JohnB wrote:What is new, is creating a structure of ethics, principles and design around it, so it can be done more effectively.
Now that's just arrogant, and I don't believe it is true. I've read about too many failed permaculture projects to believe there is anything more reliable about the design principles of permaculture, than just understanding a lifestyle and using common sense. My garden is much better since I ditched the zones that I'd setup when I moved here, and just took the advice of my neighbour, who had known my garden for the last 60 years, and gave me better advice about where individual plants grow well.
JohnB wrote:People largely used to do things because that's the only way they knew, because it was local tradition, or because it's the best they could do to survive. And many of these ways were inefficient and very damaging to people's health and the environment.
Err..maybe you could elaborate. Pick a technique and explain how it is "very damaging to people's health and the environment." I can't see how composting, bioswales, seedballs, or maintaining a shade canopy, for example, can be in any way detrimental. They're all techniques, gleaned from diverse cultures, and plagurised by permaculturalists.
JohnB wrote:Permaculture helps to look at the big picture, make connections between systems and use resources efficiently, while minimising harm to people and the environment. So it goes way beyond just using a traditional technique that you read about in a book.
What, it goes beyond what's in a permaculture book? Which book are you talking about?
JohnB wrote:Sustainable building may have been the norm in the past, but it bloody well isn't now. I took some of the cement render off my house yesterday to find the cause of a crack. The house is built of stone, with earth mortar that must have been made from clay dug on site. It was rendered about 40 years ago. I also stripped some gypsum plaster put on by the last owner within the last 7 years, to find the wall seriously wet under it.
So your house is made of (in all likelihood) local stone, and local mortar? What's unsustainable about that? That someone's recently rendered it in non-breathable cement doesn't mean the house suddenly becomes unsustainable.
JohnB wrote:What would most people who bought the house do about it? Certainly not what I hope to do. They just follow the fashion, and what's available at the local builders merchant. Once you "get" Permaculture, you think in a different way, and I'm looking at ways I can solve the problem with the least impact, and integrate it into my plans for the whole site.
That's just cobblers. So a conservation architect is an implicit permaculturalist, because they don't just shop at B&Q? The green building movement was chugging along nicely before permaculture decided to hijack their work and brand it as it's own. The same for smallholders, organic gardeners throughout the world, people living "off-grid", those creating eco-hamlets, the self-sufficient, anarchist communes, etc... The list goes on and on.