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Upcoming Courses
| Designing an edible oasis |
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11 Feb 2012
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| VEG Intro to Organic Vegetable Growing |
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18 Feb 2012
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| Keep your cool with trees and vines |
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21 Feb 2012
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| Beginners' Guide to Chickens |
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25 Feb 2012
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| Summer Fruit Tree Pruning |
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25 Feb 2012
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| Introduction to Urban Permaculture (two day course) |
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03 Mar 2012
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| Some Random Insights |
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The last three days I (Dan) did the first course in the ReganAg series. The topic was holistic management and the facilitator was Kirk Gadzia. It was a very worthwhile three days, and during the course of the workshop I wrote down a few insights (all paraphrased not direct quoted) which made me recall others from other teachers. Here they are: GeneralAll the tools available to us in managing biological systems (e.g., a garden or farm) are like stones we throw into a pond. Each makes ripples that overlap and resonate throughout the system Kirk Gadzia We don't break ecosystem rules. We break ourselves against them Kirk Gadzia Good patriots build soil (Bumper Sticker seen by Darren Doherty) The best fertiliser is the footsteps of the gardener Chinese saying Our true wealth is the fertility and health of our soil. It's like capital sitting in a bank. If we're foolish we'll squander our capital. If we're wise, we'll live off the interest and reinvest it to further build our asset (harvest a yield and build soil and the same time) Geoff Lawton The golden rule of water flow: Making water travel the longest distance over the most time is the most fertile Geoff Lawton More appropriate on farm-scaleFirst we make our properties blue (get our water sorted), then green (produce biomass), then black (build carbon-rich soils) Darren Doherty Water & wire are the two most important minerals to get right on your farm Gwyn Jones
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