Monday, September 29, 2008

Carbon Negative Communities Start to Spring up

With the changing economic climate combined with climate change and increasing awareness of the interdependence of life, carbon negative design solutions are beginning to be considered for large scale developments.

A community that claims it will be the first carbon negative community in the USA has begun design work on a large scale retirement community complete with golf courses and an equestrian center.

While my personal aesthetic tends to lend itself more towards disk golf courses weaving through food forests dripping with ripe fruit instead of mono cultural grasslands overlayed over what ever ecology is at hand, I applaud the effort to reach out to upper and middle class USAmericans with carbon negative design solutions.




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Carbon Negative Gassification

The open source revolution continues as All Power Labs offers open source plans and a selection of other options for experimental gasification systems to convert biomas into energy, gas, and biochar.
This puts the power of experimentation into the hands of individuals and communities to find solutions on a regional and situation basis.

The different options for purchasing parts of a full fledged gasifications system are designed to cater to different budgets and knowledge levels.

Here at the Ecovillage Training Center we are working towards a similar goal, and it is heartening to see someone has made so much progress and also made it available for collaborative research and use.

Biochar holds significant potential as a carbon sequestration technology. Potentially Biochar can offer the world decentralized, carbon negative power that relies on healthy ecosystems and agricultural systems to power anything from internet servers to home heating systems.
Biochar and gasification solutions are espeicaly attractive because of their scalable nature, and adaptability to situation.

You can also find information about this tagged as Flash Carbonization

For a great article on this subject check out worldchanging.com's article on the subject

The Oil Drum also has a nice piece on Terra Preta and biochar as solutions for global problems.

My reporting on biochar systems will continue as we dive into the possibilities of using biochar and biomas gassification as an integral part of a whole systems design for carbon negative agriculture systems.

Participation and Inclusivity create financial permaculture


One of the keys to a successful financial permaculture is optimizing the
existing wisdom, knowledge and talent of a region. The same goes for
designing a template for financial permaculture to become replicable
around North America and beyond.
In my mind, financial permaculture is the design of human cooperative systems to empower the mutual beneficial interaction of businesses, organizations and individuals in a community. This starts with zone zero, like any permaculture design, and focuses on creating pathways of interaction that minimize waste.

Many folks have been working hard to envision pathways towards financial permaculture. Some use the term financial permaculture, some dont...but the wisdom of those folks who have been out there designing and teaching financial permaculture systems and regenerative economic systems is invalauble.

As an organizer of a Financial Permaculture initiative and workshop I am very interested inhearing what Financial Permaculture means to other people and what their experiences are with it.

Idealy I would love to have a gallery of 250-500 word essays on what finanancial permaculture is and what it means (what it would look like, how to get there, why to go there, or any other focus) from every permaculture desiger, teacher and student who is willing to giver their time and energy..The more voices help define it, and the more wisdom we can draw on to create it, the better.

I have emailed many Permies in my network for submissions to a collective library of deffinitions of Financial Permaculture..unfortunatly everyone is busy working hard on their own projects, reveling in the walth of oportunities to turn problems into solutions...
So perhaps we will hae to be pacient as we gather definitions and examples.

This is a call for help. Please share your visions, ideas and experiences with financial permaculture. Help define the vision for an alternative to the status quo...and be a part of the solution. Send a full length essay to greg[at]thefarm.org or just respond with your thoughts in the comment section...





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Complementary Currencies




Complementary Currency Systems offer a path towards economic and ecological regeneration on the bioregional and global scale. The idea is to create currency systems that are tied in value to indexes of ecosystem healthy and cultural wealth. These bioregional currencies would be tradable againt global currencies like the dollar and Euro and create incentives for decentralized control of resources and sustainable management of resources.

This is an idea to work towards as we transition our culture away from being one controlled by complacency and consumerism and towards a regenerative culture characterized by a culture of production and cooperation.

This October a group of Gaia U Associates, local towns people and national students of business will be gathering to design the first stage of succession towards a financial ecology that is sustainable and just.

A few resources for following up on Complementary Currency are:

Wikipedia
Transaction.net
ccSyndicator
threebles.com

and articles/videos of interest:

Interview with Bernard Lietaer on You Tube
Transition Perspective with Rob Hopkins

Research

Financial Permaculture Categories:

This is a list my friend AaronC of practivist.org and I came up with in a quick brainstorming about the different design elements that might make up a financial permaculture.
These elements would be arranged in space and time to optimize synergy and mutually beneficial relationship with one another to create vibrant local and global financial systems that mimicked the efficiency of natural ecosystem services like nutrient distribution.

The categories (in no particular order) for research leading up to the Financial Permaculture Course we came up with are: (please coment and add new catagories, (leave a trackback!) or visit our wiki to add your voice to the research project to create sustainable economic solutions in this time of upheavil and change.) Links are to wikipedia articles



I will continue to add to this post, and these catagories will be reflected in the public financial permaculture wiki @ www.financialpermaculture.practivist.org.

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Fabrics




funny seeing things unravel and unfold at the same time.
I wonder what that says about the fabric of reality.

Either way the flower blossoms
and its fragrance wafts through the chaotic breezes
of mother's breadth
of mother's breath

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Forest Gardening




On week two of our advanced Permaculture Design Course, Nemawashi Permaculture with Rick Valley and Matthew English put together a hands on intensive design course focused on Forest Gardening and Orchard Remediation.

The course progressed through several iterations including survey, design, implementation, and evaluation. The design process spiraled between several projects of differing scales giving students the chance to integrate learning with hands on application as well as immersion in native forest systems.



Our focus for the course was participatory design and education, relying on the group for much of the scheduling and organization. At ties this approach can be challenging, but the rewards are immense when a group clicks and starts to integrate learning with leadership.

Our workshop covered propagation, planting, pruning, grafting, bamboo management in forest gardening, earthworks and trails for forest gardening, and orchard maintenance and remediation. The knowledge that was shared is being used to help continue propagating useful and edible plants in our nursery, regenerate the ample orchards on The Farm, and

Contour Dams and Swales



Last week Nemawashi Permaculture Design held an advanced Permaculture design course focused on the implementation of broad scale earthworks for water harvesting on a 60 acre clear cut in Middle Tennessee.

The first phase of the design was a 10,000 gallon contour dam with 200 meters of swale work. This was implemented as a part of our coursework with participants helping complete survey work, and learning the inns and outs of broad scale permaculture where the rubber hits the road.

The course progressed from class room learning centered around slide show and theory, to small scale modeling and prototyping in the sand bay of the Ecovillage Training Center. In the evening of the first night of the course we screened Water Harvesting, a great new video by Geoff Lawton showing a similar project being implimented. This gave participants a tast of what was to come.

We quickly jumped into the implementation of the the first phase of the earthworks design allowing participants to witness the equipment at work as the design created by Permaculture designers Matthew English, Cliff Davis, and Greg Landua was implemented under the supervision of Rick Valley.



As with any large and ambitious project, there were changes in plan and some quick re-designs were necessary to keep a safe amount of free board on the dam, but all of this was solid gold learning for the participants who were able to witness a real broadscale implementation.
The next day students participated in surveying and designing a design with several phases that will be implimented over the course of several more years.

Earth surgery, as Geoff Lawton and Darren Dougherty (two of the worlds leading permaculture desingers) put it, is an essential pathway to regenerating ecosystem functions and helping to combat climate instability repair damaged watersheds, desalinate soil and raise the water table.

After the successful completion of the first phase of our earthworks design we are looking forward to continuing with the master site plan as well as creating more opportunities in our bioregion to learn, teach and impliment borad scale earthworks for water harvesting.

Stay tuned to Gaia Emerging and Nemawashi.org for more information about our designs and future courses

Permaculture around the world

Global Permaculture In Action
View SlideShare presentation or Upload your own. (tags: compost agriculture)




An amazing tour of Permaculture around the world by colleague Ethan Rolland of Appleseed Permaculture and Gaia University.


Friday, September 12, 2008

lost links on Gaia Emerging

I just migrated my blog over to its own url (from www.gaiapoiesis.blogspot.com to www.gaiaemerging.com)...along the way I dropped some oft he functionality of the blog (like my blog roll).

So, I will be slowly building up the capacity, along with linking in with the emerging Gaia University collaborative research initiative that is emerging in the form of an integrative blogosphere.

My blog migration was a pretty simple and straight forward one.
I have done multiple prototype migrations (from blogger to wordpress and back) and finally settled on sticking with the web based content management system of blogger for the time being to enable me to be quick and effective in my blogging. I am juggling a number of other action learning projects (Namely the Advanced Permaculture Design Course, the Financial Permaculture Course and the Bioregional Congress) so a blog platform that has a functionality to time spent ration that is much lower than blogger is out of the question.

whew..
its getting late and I am a bit muddled...so for now I am going to leave things the way they are (and not even embed the links that would really make this post semi-functional).

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Expansive creativity and Emergence




On a quick phone call with Catherine Austin Fitts we swirled around ideas about how to create regenerative change...to me it keeps coming back to compost...setting up the proper environment to the integration of different elements into a fertile medium from which life itself can grow...
Catherine told me a great story about her time at Hamilton Securities where they set up an Invention room to help foster creativity.
In the Invention room no decisions are made...and no negativity is allowed, only unfettered optimism and creativity.
Along with the invention room there also has to be the decision room, a space on discerning contraction where people start to seperate the wheat from the chaff.
The combination of expansive creative phases, with contractive discerning phases is essential for any creative design...especially Permaculture. In Permaculture design the expansive phase has a special enphasis on listening to the land and designing according to the existing ecology, geology and hydrology.

In the case of Financial Permaculture, a subject which has been pinging through the field at an amazing rate, the expansive phase rests on including as many people into the conversation as possible...as long as folks are willing to abide by the central rule of the Invention Room: positivity.

Positivity is also one of the Millisonian principles for permaculture design, and as a praxis, and amazing way to stay creating and help prepage the field for regenerative change and the emergence of interdependence in our lives.

This may all sound like a lot of Yadda Yadda...but really and truely the impact of diverse people coming together to create a new financial paradigm is an undertaking that is going to rest primarily on the ability of participants and facilitators to take repsonsibility for their own experience, and make plenty of room for new ideas to emerge...then be ready to act when the time is right.

Last night, Marty (a good natured Aussie who was passing through The Farm on his way back home from building earthships out in the desert near Taos, New Mexico) screened a movie called Garbage Warrior. Garbage Warrior was about Michael Renolds, a controversial and edgy architect who has been working to create radically self sufficient homes for 30 plus years.

Michaels recent coup is the introduction of legislation in New Mexico creating experimental perments for citizens lookinf for sustainable solutions to housing issues.

The Financial Permaculture course taking place this October in Hohenwald TN is the experimental zone to help us explore how to address the issues brought about by a globalized economy that is taking a no holds barred stab at ripping the rug out from under our children's future.

What an exciting prospect!

Back to rule number one of the invention room! Negitivity is not allowed...
no cutting down ideas and dreams unless you have a viable alternative...in which case you are just adding to the rich meliue of an emergent future.

Monday, September 8, 2008

Financial Permaculture in Hohenwald


There is an amazing event taking place just down the road...Individuals and organizations from all over the country, world...and from just down the road...and just over the next forested hill too...are gathering this October.
The idea is a common vision for a greener, more intimate kind of economics. A kind of economics that puts power back into the hands of local families and encourages investment in a healthy environment.

Financial Permaculture is the application of ecological wisdom to economics in a participatory and dynamic design to form businesses that are profitable and zero waste. Businesses that are designed to give back more to the community and bioregion in which they operate than they take out.

The workshop will coenside with a Green Business Summit that will unite local leaders with national entreprenuers and teachers to help catalyze a green renasance in the rural Tennessee community of Lewis County.

To lead the workshop, Catherine Austin Fitts of Solari will be teaming up other amazing teachers to show how we can map financial ecosystems and design businesses and investments the help regenerate local economies.

Along with Catherine, the co-founders of Gaia University International will be lending international experitise to the small town simulation creating an integrative approach to help create green collar jobs in rural America.

Working together with local non-profits, The Lewis Country Chamber of Commerce, Leadership Lewis and the Sonnenschien Comittee is helping to mix local business expertise, ingenuity and hard work, with the knowledge and ecological wisdom of international students and teachers.

The event takes place from the 24th-28th of October in the town of Hohenwald, TN. More details here

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Earthworks for Clear Cut remediation




Along with the community building and eco-entreprenurial efforts we are undertaking in the Financial Permaculture initiative, our loose knit group of individuals and organizations here on and around The Farm is working hard on a clear cut remediation project.

I promised Daren Dougherty and other readers of the blog that I would post up our design as it became avaialable. Here is the first iteration of our design.
For a more detailed design you will have to wait and check out www.nemawashi.org as I take the time to format it properly and put up more information. For now....

Today I walked along the clear cut ridge overlooking Ledbetter Hollow with fellow permaculture designers Cliff Davis and Matthew English who have been spearheading the initial phase of project design. They have developed a nice simple design to meet the following criteria: create a contained and achievable water harvesting design that helps the regeneration of flora, stops erosion, acts as a fire break, provides emergency water supplies, and helps create an aesthetic focal point to the ridge. Other secondary functions of this kind of boradscale landscape design for water include climate change mitigation and increasing the resiliency and diversity of the local ecosystem. For an amazing treatment of the methods and possibility of water harvesting using earthworks check out Geoff Lawton's new DVD: Harvesting Water

Our preliminary design is simple and intended to be easily implementable during our weekend advanced Permaculture course in earthworks for water catchment. Secondary phases will be designed by the students and implemented at a later date.

The graphic below is a topographical map with our first phase design of contour ponds linked with swales around the North, East and South sides of the building site.


This design can be linked with other ponds and swale further up the ridgeline, and meets the clients primary needs that the project be contained, achievable and help with the energetic focus on the building site for the time being.

Our goal is to use this site as a model for soil conservation and restoration, and provide an educational opportunity in large scale permaculture design for interested students.
This project is part of an integrative design for eco-social regeneration that is being crafted by an alliance of individuals and organizations including Gaia University, the Ecovillage Training Center, The Cumberland Greens Bioregional Council, and the Center for Holistic Ecology.

Stay tuned for more on our design. I will be putting up all the information and design spcifications on www.nemawashi.org as it becomes available.

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Permi news from the RNC

More news from the collision of regenerative culture with mainstream at the Republican Naitonal Convention...
Terra Firma has more on the impounding of the permibus, a group touring the country to give classes on permaculture and regenerative design.

...for news straight from the source you can check out the permibus blog.


Sociocultural Antibodies

During the metamorphosis of organisms in nature (Such as A butterfly) the autoimmune system of the organism that is changing attacks the part of the body (Imaginal Cells) that are catalyzing and supporting the metamorphsis.

This seems to be happening in our culture as we speak. When seen first hand it puts my heart in my throat as I realize the power and inertia built into the suppressive and violent system we are choosing to operate within as a culture. My first response to the article contained below was fear and loathing...precisely the responses that this kind of news is designed to create...because my flight or flight responce is quick to follow any fear and loathing emotional responce. But as I sink further into awareness of the matter at hand it becomes apparent that running off into the hills, or picking up a sign to run off and join the abused protesters in the streats will not be as affective as connecting peace, justice and sustainabilty together in mainstream society. It is obvious that the kind of protesting and activism that have been used in the past will not work. It seems like a more grassroots, decentralized actionist approach based on personal and community empowerment will be the order of the day. Building active, cross cultural coalitions of concerned citizens of all ilk is thenext step in the evolution of our society towards something more green and democratic. Protest and critisism are fine, but without active solutions they wont get us anywhere. So, I guess my soap box speach of the day is: Get off the soap box on the streat corner and get back to the business at hand...the hard work of educating and empowering a population that is having its intellegence and willpower sucked away by economic and cultural warfare.

Activists I salute you.

Now back to the grind.

Its a long hard road, but nothign good is ever easy.

Here is a report from the bioregional listserve that set off the preceeding thoguhtscape
From bioreg@yahoo.com about the Republican National Convention...On TV its all fan fair and glitter...
On the streets....



News from Minneapolis:


Glenn Greenwald

Saturday Aug. 30, 2008 12:44 EDT
Massive police raids on suspected protestors in Minneapolis

(updated below -- with video)
Protesters here in Minneapolis have been targeted by a series of highly
intimidating, sweeping police raids across the city, involving teams of
25-30 officers in riot gear, with semi-automatic weapons drawn, entering
homes of those suspected of planning protests, handcuffing and forcing them
to lay on the floor, while law enforcement officers searched the homes,
seizing computers, journals, and political pamphlets. Last night, members of
the St. Paul police department and the Ramsey County sheriff's department
handcuffed, photographed and detained dozens of people meeting at a public
venue to plan a demonstration, charging them with no crime other than "fire
code violations," and early this morning, the Sheriff's department sent
teams of officers into at least four Minneapolis area homes where suspected
protesters were staying.
Jane Hamsher and I were at two of those homes this morning -- one which had
just been raided and one which was in the process of being raided. Each of
the raided houses is known by neighbors as a "hippie house," where 5-10
college-aged individuals live in a communal setting, and everyone we spoke
with said that there had never been any problems of any kind in those
houses, that they were filled with "peaceful kids" who are politically
active but entirely nonthreatening and friendly. Posted below is the video of
the scene, including various interviews, which convey a very clear sense of
what is actually going on here.
In the house that had just been raided, those inside described how a team of
roughly 25 officers had barged into their homes with masks and black swat
gear, holding large semi-automatic rifles, and ordered them to lie on the
floor, where they were handcuffed and ordered not to move. The officers
refused to state why they were there and, until the very end, refused to
show whether they had a search warrant. They were forced to remain on the
floor for 45 minutes while the officers took away the laptops, computers,
individual journals, and political materials kept in the house. One of the
individuals renting the house, an 18-year-old woman, was extremely shaken as
she and others described how the officers were deliberately making
intimidating statements such as "Do you have Terminator ready?" as they lay
on the floor in handcuffs. The 10 or so individuals in the house all said
that though they found the experience very jarring, they still intended to
protest against the GOP Convention, and several said that being subjected
to raids of that sort made them more emboldened than ever to do so.
Several of those who were arrested are being represented by Bruce Nestor,
the President of the Minnesota chapter of the National Lawyers' Guild.
Nestor said that last night's raid involved a meeting of a group calling
itself the "RNC Welcoming Committee", and that this morning's raids appeared
to target members of "Food Not Bombs," which he described as an anti-war,
anti-authoritarian protest group. There was not a single act of violence or
illegality that has taken place, Nestor said. Instead, the raids were purely
anticipatory in nature, and clearly designed to frighten people
contemplating taking part in any unauthorized protests.
Nestor indicated that only 2 or 3 of the 50 individuals who were handcuffed
this morning at the 2 houses were actually arrested and charged with a
crime, and the crime they were charged with is "conspiracy to commit riot."
Nestor, who has practiced law in Minnesota for many years, said that he had
never before heard of that statute being used for anything, and that its
parameters are so self-evidently vague, designed to allow pre-emeptive
arrests of those who are peacefully protesting, that it is almost certainly
unconstitutional, though because it had never been invoked (until now), its
constitutionality had not been tested.
There is clearly an intent on the part of law enforcement authorities here
to engage in extreme and highly intimidating raids against those who are
planning to protest the Convention. The DNC in Denver was the site of
several quite ugly incidents where law enforcement acted on behalf of
Democratic Party officials and the corporate elite that funded the
Convention to keep the media and protesters from doing anything remotely
off-script. But the massive and plainly excessive preemptive police raids in
Minnesota are of a different order altogether. Targeting people with
automatic-weapons-carrying SWAT teams and mass raids in their homes, who are
suspected of nothing more than planning dissident political protests at a
political convention and who have engaged in no illegal activity whatsoever,
is about as redolent of the worst tactics of a police state as can be
imagined.

UPDATE: Here is the first of the videos, from the house that had just been
raided:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wShi41LcoCg&feature=user

http://www.alternet.org/election08/97029

http://qik.com/video/249562