Tuesday 17 January 2017

From Ontario to Arizona

We're in Southern Ontario now. The land of endless corn, cattle, and cold.

I've observed the lawn culture to be strong here. Lawns bordering lawns, cut grass ditches and spray grass banks bordering fields. Great for holding down soil and limiting run off but the amount of work as well as additives going into keeping these lawns cut and green seems excessive.

Some alternatives I've read about for those wishing to ditch the high maintenance lawn are using fake lawns, spray painting browned out grass or even just paving over lawned areas. None of those seem particularly appealing or functional.

A rock garden is an interesting alternative but I've yet to see the function of that option besides getting a work-out moving the rocks around or whatever meditative properties the Japanese get out of them.

So the two viable options I've found are:

Low Maintenance Lawns - for those who still want to keep the basic lawn look and feel a low maintenance lawn is a combonation of existing grasses and an addition of low maintenance grass alternatives with one of the best being clover. Adding clover reduces the need for excessive watering, adds nitrogen, has deeper root systems that break up harder soils, and is easily turned into the soil if a garden is desired in the future.


Native Plants and Wild Grasses - This is a beautiful alternative which requires a bit of work in the beginning but leads to a self sustaining system in the future. Planting wild grasses and native plants has the benefit of attracting pollinating insects to your land and with a little research you have the option to add eatable crops to your previous lawned areas. One drawback is that you might attract rodents and some cities actually have banned this kind of wild lawn but more places lately are lifting restrictions.


Looking forward to heading down south to Arizona and seeing what kinds of things they do down their with their 'lawn' areas.




Monday 9 January 2017

What is Permaculture?

Permaculture is a principle of design used to create sustainable and self sufficient eco-systems.

"Permaculture is a philosophy of working with, rather than against nature; of protracted & thoughtful observation rather than protracted & thoughtless labour; of looking at plants & animals in all their functions, rather than treating any area as a single-product system." 

Bill Mollison - Permaculture: A Designers Manual

The core ethics of Permaculture are:

Care of the earth
Care of the people
Reinvest all surplus

Permaculture follows guiding principals:

Each element of the design needs multiple functions
Each function is supported by multiple elements
Each element is interconected

Check out a neat little animation about Permaculture.

Sunday 8 January 2017

Hami

Who is Hami ?

I grew up in small town Owen Sound on the bottom of the Bruce Peninsula among the Great Lakes of Canada.

My mother was the owner and operator of Riverforest Montessori School which is where I got a my love for learning. My father was a physical education teacher at a high school which is where I got my love for being active.

I left high school after grade 12 and went west to the mountains. After working on beaches and ski slopes a friend came over and told me Taiwan would be fun so I went there at the age of 20. I studied Mandarin Chinese and taught English part time.

I later returned to Canada and went to Montessori Teachers College in Toronto. I went back to Taiwan and studied philosophy and music history while teaching and living in Kaohsiung.

I came upon Permaculture through a friendly neighbour while I was living on Monkey Mountain in southern Taiwan and did my PDC course in 2015 with Geoff Lawton.

Now in 2017 I have a wife and we are back in Canada about to start a round the world tour in an effort to gain more hands on experience in the sustainable agriculture, building, and design fields.

Enjoy my observations and interesting permaculture ideas from around the world.

H -