Permaculture land use design - where to begin
Map your area
Before getting stuck in and making serious changes to the landscape it is valuable to map the area you will be working with. The more detail you can include the better as this helps create a modal where the various interacting elements can be viewed from a single vantage point.
Explore and observe the space taking note of important of interesting features:
- Existing infrastructure - fences, water pipes and taps, electric supply (above and below ground)
- Access - tracks, gates
- Ridges, valleys and points where water enters and leaves the landscape
- Shelter plantings with density and height
- Favourite eating, sleeping and manuring locations of animals
Likewise, observing your landscape over time helps build a detailed modal of what you are working with:
- Winter and summer sunrise and sunset locations and any shading from trees and hills
- Timing of first and last frost
- Wet and dry spots
- Prominent wind directions
Tackle existing or impending problems
Try and identify any issues that may exacerbate over time just as erosion, poorly placed trees that may get to big, poor boundary fences that animals might get through.
Get a return or yield
We all need food and most likely some amount of money. Work on developing gardens and income. Mature fruit trees will produce fruit for a given season but will take many years to get to this point. Start planting as soon as possible to get them growing and aim to have a wide selection to cover as many months as possible. Annual vegetables are relatively quick and rewarding. Start with those that are easy to grow, reliable and highly productive. Source as many perennial vegetables as possible. These will continue to produce for many years.
Generating income is very specific to your personal skills, interests and the specific characteristics of the land, proximity to markets and so on. Be creative and unique.
Start small and grow
If you are new to all of this then take things slow, try and avoid mistakes but don't let them stop you moving forward, trying new things and learning. Better to make small mistakes than create a huge problem or expense. Be observant and thoughtful, register feedback from the system and allow it to guide future decision making.
Manage water flows
My experience comes from working in landscapes where summers are hot and dry and winters are cold and wet. Unless your land is in a depression, in which case it will likely be boggy, water preservation and storage may be important.
Aim to slow water flows, spread the water out rather than allowing to to channelise and hold it back with ponds, dams and leaky weirs to allow it to infiltrate and soak in.
Work from the inside out
The permaculture concept of zones is helpful here. Focus your attention close around your home and other areas you spend a lot of time. Work on improving the productivity, efficiency, reliability and comfort for your everyday systems.
If you have taken on property that has existing infrastructure you may find the 'restrictions' imposed by the placement decisions of earlier occupants to be frustrating. Try and turn the limitations into creative challenge and be thankful for the decisions you haven't had to make, as there is no guarantee you would have done better.
Work from the outside inward
Due to the happy go choppy nature of land subdivision and the inevitable need for road corridors, most land parcels are going to have neighbours and public frontage. These obvious 'edges' are naturally places to focus some of our attention early on.
Thoughtful selection and placement of plants along boundaries can help with:
- Developing adequate wind protection
- Preventing animal incursion
- Restricting the wandering eyes of nosy passers by
- Reducing the risk of fire encroachment
Need a hand?
If you're not sure where to start or just need someone to discuss your ideas with please get in touch