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Home / Whanganui Chronicle / Lifestyle

Eco-design ideas make most of lazy days of summer

By Nelson Lebo
Whanganui Chronicle·
22 Nov, 2013 08:13 PM4 mins to read

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The art of La-Z-Boy gardening and the result - abundant kai, right.

The art of La-Z-Boy gardening and the result - abundant kai, right.

Permaculture, an eco-design system developed during the 1970s, is sometimes known for the paradoxical statements of its founders, such as " lazy gardening", or "the problem is the solution".

To the uninitiated, these types of statements may only add confusion to an already enigmatic word: permaculture.

Personally, I have come to define permaculture this way: an eco-design system that seeks to recognise and maximise beneficial relationships while minimising or eliminating harmful relationships.

In this column, I'll provide some examples that illustrate this definition, as well as one that demystifies the paradoxes above.

In an agricultural/horticultural application, maximising beneficial relationships can include companion planting, attracting beneficial insects, integrating animals such as ducks (snail and slug control), chickens (grass and insect control) and, in larger systems, sheep or small cows (periodic grazing between rows in an orchard or vineyard).

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A home can be designed - or in our case re-designed - for its relationship to the sun.

We added glazing to the northeast and northwest sides of our villa to increase the amount of free warmth provided by winter sun, while removing windows from the southeast and southwest to reduce heat loss. Additionally, by removing the southwest window, we limit overheating in summer caused by late afternoon sun.

From an organisational perspective, our tiny non-profit The ECO School seeks out mutually beneficial relationships with businesses, organisations and individuals that share our kaupapa of healthy homes, healthy food, healthy people, healthy planet.

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We have excellent working relationships with the Sisters of Saint Joseph, Community Education Service, Central2Health, TreeLife NZ, the New Zealand Masters Games, YMCA Central and the Wanganui Chronicle, Midweek, and River City Press - among others.

On the other hand, despite our best efforts, we have failed to develop relationships with some organisations with whom we thought we could work successfully.

And, in the rare case, we have cut off relations with those entities with whom we felt we were only giving and not receiving.

And now to address the paradoxes of lazy gardening and problems as solutions.

Discover more

Design: Whip up a new kitchen

28 Nov 05:00 PM

Lifestyle: Transforming villa helped to transform minds

21 Feb 07:22 PM

Like many residents of our fair city, we have an abundance of kikuyu and couch grass on our section. These grasses, among others I cannot identify, compete with our shallow-rooted fruit trees for nutrients and water, and encroach into our garden beds.

The eco-thrifty solution to these problems involves a firm grip and a stack of newspapers.

When I find an area needing attention, I simply pull out as much grass as I can comfortably handle, lay down the newspaper, and lay the grass back on top. The grass I have pulled acts as a mulch that keeps the newspaper from blowing away while blocking sunlight to the shoots that emerge from the roots below.

The problem grass has become a solution mulch, and I have not had to move my body any more than a simple twisting motion while kneeling. I have not had to go to the shop to buy a bale of straw, nor have I had to involve a wheelbarrow. Problem sorted, with plenty of time to go for a surf.

Interested in learning more about this type of eco-design thinking? Check out the upcoming events:

Tomorrow, 3-4 pm: Food Forests. Diverse, productive, low-maintenance "ecosystems" of edible trees, vines, bushes and fowl. Donation.

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December 1, 1-4 pm: Permaculture Design for a Suburban Section. How to design and install a low-maintenance/high-productivity food system by working with nature, not against it. Sliding scale, $25-$45.

December 8, 1-4 pm: Driftwood Structures for Gardens and Landscaping. View a wide variety of ways we've used driftwood as a beautiful, durable, free building element. Learn how to make some of these items. Tools and galvanised nails provided. Sliding scale, $25-$45.

10 Arawa Place. Registration: theecoschool@gmail.com or 06 3445013; 022 635 0868.

Nelson Lebo consults businesses, schools, and home-owners on all aspects of sustainability.

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