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| 573 files in 146 albums and 1 categories with 1432 comments viewed 419119 times |
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Jordan 2002
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The Jordan project is in the Dead Sea Valley 400m below sea level, the rainfall average is 150mm and the temperature range is subtropical because of lack of altitude, the soils is 5000 parts per million salt, and the only water available is ground water at 4100 parts per million salt. The purpose of the project is to demonstrate sustainable farming systems for small farmers and educate from the site. The project is funded by a Japenese aid organisation and facilitated by a Jordanian aid organisation. The site was first designed by PRI in August 2000 and water harvesting earth works were installed in December 2001, 1.5k of swales were install with a full capacity of 1 million litres of water. Permaculture Design Course were taught seperately to men and women in December 2000 and August 2001. The perimeter fence was finished in April 2001 and the first trees were planted on the same day. Only 1/5 amount of water was used to drip irrigate under the mulched tree plantings and 3 legume trees were planted to every fruit tree. With 4 months figs, pomegranites and guava's were fruiting and salt levels had began to drop dramatically under the swales. Many trials were laid out include a very successful 1/2 hectare of organic oinions. Chickens, ducks, geese, pigeons and 6 sheep were introduced to specially design animal housing and cut forage system with initial main purpose of establishing a diverse manure source. A gardian's house and an appropriate energy conserving education centre. A crop of winter barley was grown on the inter swale areas, to be use as animal feed and the straw as animal bedding, the to be composted and returned to the system.
27 files, last one added on Nov 17, 2002
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Mexico Project 2002
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The Mexico project was started by students of the Permaculture Research Institute from our November 2000 design certificate course through their locally formed NGO Pacificos. Situated 60 kilometers south of Oaxaca City in Southern Mexico in the wet dry tropics. The project is funded by the Kellogs Foundation and aims to demonstrate, educate and network permaculture design on the aquired 10 hectare site called Bonanza. In October 2002 Geoff and Sindhu visited the site for 2 weeks, invited to work with the Pacificos team designing the site for main infrastructure placement and water harvesting earthworks implementation. These were an accomadation building for 40 students, a shower laundry compost toilet block, kitchen dinning room, classroom, administration building, workshops maintenance and craft, staff housing, a new access road, many swales, 6 dams and a small 3 canal chinampa system. Earthworks were completed for 3 dams, 800 meters of swale and a new access road. The Permaculture Research Institute will teach a design course on the site in June 2003 during this time more earthworks will take place and 3 more dams will be positioned plus many swales will be pegged and installed.
19 files, last one added on Dec 20, 2002
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Chicken Tractors
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Chicken Tractors: are system of designing chicken system where the chickens are put to work scratching over the ground removing any herbaceous plants eating weed seeds therefore breaking weed cycles, eating insects their eggs and larvae therefore breaking pest cycles. They naturally manure the ground increasing fertility and shred any mulch additions increasing its speed of decomposition increasing soil organic matter. The chicken are concentrated on one area just long enough to complete all these tasks but not too that they cause compaction or acid soil conditions. Systems can be design to cycle the birds through numerous permanent gardens or can be mobile systems that can be moved from garden bed to garden bed or across the landscape with tree systems being planted behind them. Performance will vary in relation to the size of the area, the time of the year, the climate, the original soil type, landscape profile, the number, type, size and age of the chickens.
20 files, last one added on Nov 12, 2003
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| Random files |

483 viewsAugust 2001, 4 month old trees planted inside the swale which is full of mulch.
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2379 viewsThe sugar cane hexagon has the main window frame put in place.
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Sticks and covers everywhere to stop the chickens destroying newly planted things152 views
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398 views
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147 views
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Compost tea251 viewsTastes terrible, but plants love it, and the bacteria in it protect plants when the tea is sprayed on. This protection will last about 5 months.
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416 viewsConstructing a spillway
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1048 viewsFarm view
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482 viewsSolar powered campsite and eartworks observation tower.
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flash_flood_9218 views
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| Last additions |

comfrey4 viewscomfreyNov 24, 2008
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Intercropping Aubergines, Vegetable Spaghetti, beans and chickens!51 viewsSep 09, 2008
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Lazy gardening88 viewsChickens clean and help manure our garden Sep 09, 2008
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Some of our chicken army61 viewsI couldn't garden the way I do without my chickensSep 09, 2008
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Chickens love lettuce !67 viewsSep 09, 2008
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Planting around the tent frame51 viewsSep 09, 2008
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Spring garden showing chickens house on the right106 viewsSep 09, 2008
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Waiting for rain before mulching68 viewsThe plants are protected by sticks and old fruit cages against the chickens until they're big enough look after themselvesSep 09, 2008
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Getting ready for planting60 viewsThe garden has been cleared by the chickens - there's no sign of the mulch I put down in the autumnSep 09, 2008
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Tent frame cage to protect plants from free-range chickens57 viewsSep 09, 2008
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