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8 forms of capital active hope adaptation agroecology agroforestry alder buckthorn Amazon anxiety apples arthritis autumn Autumn equinox back yard beans Bec Hellouin beech tree bees beneficial berries biochar biodigester biodiversity blackberries blackthorn book review brain brassica cage budget build building campesino capital card deck Celtic festivals change changes chemical-free chickens christmas circular clay pot cleansers cleansing milks climate change climate chaos climate collapse climate emergency climate grief climate solutions climbers climbing cob comfrey community Community Nature Network community projects compost compost teas connection consciousness conservation container cooking coppice coppicing cordial cosmology courgettes crafts crisis crop protection Cross Quarter Festival cultural emergence culture cut flowers cycles degraded design diary diversity DIY do it yourself dryland earth care earth's cycles Earth's energy earths cycles ecoculture economics ecopoetry ecosystem ecosystem restoration camps ecosystems edges edible edible flowers education efficiency elder elderflowers elements elixir energy equinox ethics face mask fair shares Fairtrade farming feedback feminine ferns figs film firewood floristry flower essence flower garden flowers food food forest food garden footbath forage foraging forest garden forest gardening forests fruit fruit leather fruit trees full moon funding fungi future future care gardening gardens garlic gift economy gin Give Nature a voice Glennie Kindred global poverty glut grapes green space greenhouse grief groundcover grow grow food grow your own growing guilds habitat habits handcream harvest harvests hawthorn hazel hazelnut healing shrubs healing trees health healthy soil heart health hedgerow hedging herbal herbal remedies herbal teas herbalist herbs holistic holistic planned grazing home homeless homemade wine homestead hope Hugelkultur humanure hummus hungry gap IBC tanks Imbolc incense increase yields Indigenous inexpensive influence inspiration International Womens Day jam keyline kingfisher kitchen garden lacto-fermentation Lammas land landscape landscapes life lifestyle limeflowers livelihood livestock living labs logs Looby Macnamara lotion low cost low-impact Lush Spring Prize macerations Manda Scott Mangwende Orphan Care Trust market garden market gardening marmalade marshmallow mass heater meadowsweet medicinal microbes microfarm Midwest Permaculture mimic mindset mitigation money moon phases Morag Gamble moringa Mother Earth movement mulch multifunctional mushrooms native plants natural natural building natural fertiliser natural skincare natural swimming pool nature nature connection nitrogen no dig no waste no-dig north-facing novel November nutrition nuts observe oca October off-grid oil cleansing orchard orchards organic organic flowers organic gardening outdoor shower oven oxymel oyster pallets pasture-fed patterns people people care peoplecare perennials permaculture permaculture design permaculture magazine award permaculture projects permaculutre permayouth pesto pests philippines pine tree pips pizza oven plant profile plants pollinators pollution polyculture polycultures positive change preserving principles propagating protection pruning prunings psycho-spiritual awareness psychospiritual transformation rainforest rainwater raspberries recipe recipes reduce reed beds regeneration regenerative regenerative agriculture relative location relative matter remedy renewable renewable energy resilient resources restoration reuse revolution rhythms rootstock rootstocks roundhouse roundwood runner beans Rupert Read sage salad salads salve Samhain schools Scotland scotts pine seasonal seasons seeds selfcare Sepp Holzer september septic tanks sewage treatment shade shamanism sheet mulching shrubs skincare sloes slugs small solutions small-scale smallholding social justice soil health solar solstice solutions sowing spiritual spring squash stacking functions stock-free straw straw bale summer support sustainable Sweet Bay syntropic systems temperate terraces thistles thrutopia timber timber framing tincture tonic toolkit tools transformation Transformative Adaptation trees upcycle urban urban gardening veg garden vegan veganic vermicomposting vinegar visionaries walnuts waste water water cleansing watering weeds wellbeing wetland wild edges wild food wild garlic wildflower wildlife wine recipes wings winter winter greens winter salads winter solstice wood stove woodburner woodland woodland management woodlands world is possible worms yarrow year round year-round food yield young people youth zai pits zone 00 zoning

Topics

8 forms of capital active hope adaptation agroecology agroforestry alder buckthorn Amazon anxiety apples arthritis autumn Autumn equinox back yard beans Bec Hellouin beech tree bees beneficial berries biochar biodigester biodiversity blackberries blackthorn book review brain brassica cage budget build building campesino capital card deck Celtic festivals change changes chemical-free chickens christmas circular clay pot cleansers cleansing milks climate change climate chaos climate collapse climate emergency climate grief climate solutions climbers climbing cob comfrey community Community Nature Network community projects compost compost teas connection consciousness conservation container cooking coppice coppicing cordial cosmology courgettes crafts crisis crop protection Cross Quarter Festival cultural emergence culture cut flowers cycles degraded design diary diversity DIY do it yourself dryland earth care earth's cycles Earth's energy earths cycles ecoculture economics ecopoetry ecosystem ecosystem restoration camps ecosystems edges edible edible flowers education efficiency elder elderflowers elements elixir energy equinox ethics face mask fair shares Fairtrade farming feedback feminine ferns figs film firewood floristry flower essence flower garden flowers food food forest food garden footbath forage foraging forest garden forest gardening forests fruit fruit leather fruit trees full moon funding fungi future future care gardening gardens garlic gift economy gin Give Nature a voice Glennie Kindred global poverty glut grapes green space greenhouse grief groundcover grow grow food grow your own growing guilds habitat habits handcream harvest harvests hawthorn hazel hazelnut healing shrubs healing trees health healthy soil heart health hedgerow hedging herbal herbal remedies herbal teas herbalist herbs holistic holistic planned grazing home homeless homemade wine homestead hope Hugelkultur humanure hummus hungry gap IBC tanks Imbolc incense increase yields Indigenous inexpensive influence inspiration International Womens Day jam keyline kingfisher kitchen garden lacto-fermentation Lammas land landscape landscapes life lifestyle limeflowers livelihood livestock living labs logs Looby Macnamara lotion low cost low-impact Lush Spring Prize macerations Manda Scott Mangwende Orphan Care Trust market garden market gardening marmalade marshmallow mass heater meadowsweet medicinal microbes microfarm Midwest Permaculture mimic mindset mitigation money moon phases Morag Gamble moringa Mother Earth movement mulch multifunctional mushrooms native plants natural natural building natural fertiliser natural skincare natural swimming pool nature nature connection nitrogen no dig no waste no-dig north-facing novel November nutrition nuts observe oca October off-grid oil cleansing orchard orchards organic organic flowers organic gardening outdoor shower oven oxymel oyster pallets pasture-fed patterns people people care peoplecare perennials permaculture permaculture design permaculture magazine award permaculture projects permaculutre permayouth pesto pests philippines pine tree pips pizza oven plant profile plants pollinators pollution polyculture polycultures positive change preserving principles propagating protection pruning prunings psycho-spiritual awareness psychospiritual transformation rainforest rainwater raspberries recipe recipes reduce reed beds regeneration regenerative regenerative agriculture relative location relative matter remedy renewable renewable energy resilient resources restoration reuse revolution rhythms rootstock rootstocks roundhouse roundwood runner beans Rupert Read sage salad salads salve Samhain schools Scotland scotts pine seasonal seasons seeds selfcare Sepp Holzer september septic tanks sewage treatment shade shamanism sheet mulching shrubs skincare sloes slugs small solutions small-scale smallholding social justice soil health solar solstice solutions sowing spiritual spring squash stacking functions stock-free straw straw bale summer support sustainable Sweet Bay syntropic systems temperate terraces thistles thrutopia timber timber framing tincture tonic toolkit tools transformation Transformative Adaptation trees upcycle urban urban gardening veg garden vegan veganic vermicomposting vinegar visionaries walnuts waste water water cleansing watering weeds wellbeing wetland wild edges wild food wild garlic wildflower wildlife wine recipes wings winter winter greens winter salads winter solstice wood stove woodburner woodland woodland management woodlands world is possible worms yarrow year round year-round food yield young people youth zai pits zone 00 zoning

The Earth Care Manual

Written by one of world’s foremost teachers and practitioners of temperate permaculture, this book explains in depth how to apply permaculture to any situation.

Until now, the most complete exposition of permaculture in print has been Bill Mollison’s Permaculture – A Designers’ Manual. When it first appeared in 1988 it was an extraordinary piece of work. At once revolutionary, scholarly and practical, it was a call to arms for the environmental movement, a challenge to begin building the world we all want to see from the ground up. Huge in scope, the Designers’ Manual covers so much ground as to be almost overwhelming. I often tried to imagine Bill sitting down in front of his word processor, licking his lips and saying, “Right, page 1 . . . ” , but could never quite visualise it.

For most of us involved in permaculture, the Designers’ Manual has been a bible; we all love it and are in awe of what it contains and the implications thereof, but few of us, I suspect have ever read it from cover to cover. One reason for this is that, unless we plan to go and work in far hotter climes than these, entire chapters of the book are irrelevant. This is the inevitable resuit of trying to write a universal design manual, which is, ironically, one of the book’s strengths. Since its publication in 1988 it has gone through many reprints, but has never been revised or updated. As a resuit, some of it now is a bit out of date, much of the material on, say, reed beds or natural building, has been greatly built on since by the wider permaculture movement. What has been needed for a while now is a designers’ manual specific to our climate, and it is telling that it has taken this long for the wider temperate permaculture community t o grow and acquire the depth of understanding needed to produce a book like The Earth Care Manual.

Patrick Whitefield has been teaching permaculture almost since it first arrived on these shores, and has a wealth and depth of experience which is almost unrivalled. He teaches widely and is recognised as one of the foremost voices articulating what permaculture might actually mean to those of us in temperate Europe. This book took him seven years to write, and this huge input of time and energy is clear when you first get your hands on a copy – this is a big book.

Patrick begins with the principies and ethics of permaculture, and then looks in detail at the basics, the building blocks we, as permaculture designers, have to work with. These include soil, fertility, water, climate, microclimate, energy and materials, all gone into in great detail. The chapter on soils is excellent, proving that you really don’t need a degree in soil science to understand what is going on under your feet. The chapter on energy cuts to the chase, we use too much energy and need to use less. Once he has explored the issues and the problems, he offers us solutions, mostly ones achievable on a domestic scale.

In the second part he looks at permaculture as applied to a range of situations: buildings, gardens, orchards, farms, woodlands and biodiversity. For me the highlight of the book is the section on nut growing. The argument for shifting our agriculture in the direction of nutbased agroforestry is one of such blatant common sense that it is a constant source of amazement that nothing much really seems to be happening to make it a reality. Philip Rutter, who has been doing a lot of research into nut production in the US, has written that to have fully tested climate-specific nut varieties in widespread production will take us 60 years. We urgently need to get started, and this section of the book is passionately argued and well backed up with research.

His look at farming offers a way forward for agriculture which is currently in the doldrums. Diversity, direct marketing, farmers’ markets, a holistic approach – all this is excellent stuff. Patrick clearly spends a lot of time visiting farms around the country, and the text is peppered with examples of people here and there doing pioneering work. While he is obviously deeply passionate about farms and farming, he also doesn’t shy away from the fact that most of us live in towns and cities, and much of his gardening section is dedicated to urban backyards, and techniques for small spaces. The same with fruit growing, there is something there for every situation.

In the final section, Patrick turns to design – how we put all this together, in a holistic, well designed way. This after all is what distinguishes permaculture from organics; permaculture is about design. It is the design glue that sticks all the different elements of a sustainable set-up together. Patrick’s section on design comes in two parts, the first is on how to design, and the second is on tools for the design. The first section is very clear and straightforward, as well as being very encouraging, ‘Go on, have a go…’, and the steps he sets out are clearly based on many years experience. The design tools are also very useful, being clearly set out and easy to use. The whole section is very illuminating – even for people who have been designing for a while, there are new insights in seeing Patrick’ own approach to both the client and to the site itself.

The Earth Care Manual, put simply, is fantastic. It is what I have been waiting for for years, and it is what those of us in temperate climates have urgently needed. Patrick’s considerable experience in the fields of woodlands and fruit growing shine through especially strongly, but the whole book is rich with experience. I especially like how he has taken Peter Harper’s ‘Quit While You’re Ahead’ principle to heart (which basically encourages us to take the actions which will have the most effect in preference to those with a lesser effect). In his chapter on buildings, he focuses mainly on existing housing. The temptation for permaculturists is to write reams about cob and strawbale housing, an option only open to a few, whilst most of us are left wondering what to do with our existing houses. All the way through the emphasis is on what works, and what actually has an effect, rather than dogmatic sacred cows.

Is there anything I’d like to have seen done differently? Perhaps a section on peoplecare would have been good. Patrick makes clear from the start that he isn’t going to do a section on economics, as it is not his forte, but a section on what permaculturists call ‘invisible structures’ might have been useful: how permaculturists can work within the Agenda 21 process, and the kind of work that the Bioregional Development Group are doing, strengthening and rebuilding community. In Bill Mollison’s book, the final chapter, ‘The Strategies of an Alternative Global Nation’ is excellent, although now slightly dated, and much experience has been gained over the years from people working on the ground in this area. Does the absence of this peoplecare angle mean that a second volume is planned, more in the vein of The Peoplecare Manual? Also, I wondered whether a section on patterns might have fitted in nicely. The section on patterns in the Designers’ Manual is one of its most fascinating but probably least read sections. I think an understanding of pattern is very useful in permaculture, and I would love to have read Patrick’s take on that.

As a teacher of permaculture, this book is a gift from the heavens. Until now, I had no book I could use as a course companion. Information was spread about in the pages of various books and photocopied handouts. Finally here it all is in one volume. The book is rich with insight and practical advice. Here you will find the figures on how many hectares of coppice you need to heat a house, how to calculate the rainfall off a roof, how long different timbers will last outdoors once you have made them into fences… The species lists are excellent, the pictures are clear and illuminating, and the resources section is very useful. I also really liked the way that each chapter ends with an example of someone’s practical experience. This not only ties the theory in with real people’s everyday lives but also reminds the reader of the wider movement out there and the wealth of work being done at grassroots level by ordinary people.

With this book, permaculture in these islands comes of age. At last we have our own source of reference; no longer will people be able to say, “Oh permaculture, that only really works in Australia” or “That’s a kind of gardening, isn’t it?”. In the same way that the organic movement is often traced back to Lady Eve Balfour’s The Living Soil, and the environmental movement to Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring, future generations will look back on this as the book that defined what permaculture means to those of us living in temperate zones.

Patrick has defined what makes the permaculture philosophy distinct from any other (although not to the depth of David Holmgren’s recent book, which goes much deeper into the angle that permaculture is a way of thinking). Patrick has pulled together the knowledge that has been accumulating here since the first design courses in the 1980s. What he offers is common sense solutions rooted in the culture and climate of these islands.

We, as a species, are in a unique position of being able to see a crisis unfolding, and still being able, with ingenuity, imagination and determination, to create a path through it that will lead us to a place far more pleasant than the one we currently inhabit. It is our job as permaculturists to persuade people that a future without unlimited fossil fuels, and with greatly reduced oil consumption will actually be a preferable place, with healthier homes, regenerated communities, clean food, local economies, a culture of abundance and conservation, rather than excessive consumption and wage slavery. We are doing this in the face of a fear-based idea that the end of oil means the end of us, which indeed, unless we begin rapidly to implement the contents of this book, is inevitably true. This book is a clear and unarguable road map to where we need to go, an A-Z to sanity and common sense.

Patrick deserves our praise and thanks for this monumental achievement. I hope that he now gets to become a recliner rather than a designer for a short while, and gets to rest after what must have been a huge task. He has created a manual with which we can repair this beautiful jewel of a planet which we are fortunate enough to inhabit, and in so doing has given us a truly precious gift. 

Further Resources

Watch

What is Permaculture? Introduction to Permaculture / Patrick Whitefield / Basics of Growing food

Books

Permaculture Design
by Aranya

Permaculture Design Companion
by Jasmine Dale

People and Permaculture
by Looby Macnamara

Articles

What is Permaculture: Part 1 – Ethics

About the Author

Rob Hopkins is the founder of the Transition movement and author of From What Is to What If and several other books. Find out more about his work at