A look at a range of permaculture projects in Jordan: one by PRI and 8 by CARE International

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Date : May 27, 2010 05:11am

Source: Kitchen Caravan

Discovering Permaculture in Jordan: A Video Diary

On a trip to Jordan last year, Emma visited two permaculture projects, this is a brief video diary of what she saw. For more information about the permaculture projects visit: Jordan Valley Permaculture Project and CARE-Jordan

Also, an article about CARE’s 8 permaculture projects from Jo Magazine. This article is a couple of years old, but gives a very nice overview of their work.

Source: Kitchen Garden

GREEN HOUSE EFFECT

THE LAST TIME RAIN fell in Bayoudeh was February 10. The land has only gotten dryer since then. People in and out of Jordan like to talk about how water poor the country really is, but 2008 arrived to prove it with a vengeance.

Bayoudeh is a small village of about 3,500 people. It sits wedged between the Jordan valley and its highlands, perched on the slopes among the few remaining wild oak trees and stretches of olives. It’s been a dry year, but compared to the over-grazed hills deep in the Valley, Bayoudeh looks positively lush. Most of the modest stone houses are nestled in pockets of vegetation; even dried out vegetation is better than none, and in this year of almost no rain, the brown patches under the trees are crisp with dried grasses and low-lying, water-hardy plants.

In the last rainy season, the land got only about 60 percent of the average rainfall expected from the wet season, according to Sameeh Nuimat, the permaculture project manager at CARE International, Jordan. The average is about 400mm of rain, in a season lasting from November to April. This year, the rains came from December to February, and deposited only 302 mm.

Source: Jo Magazine

http://www.vimeo.com/7658282
Video source: Craig Mackintosh

PRI Jordan Permaculture Project from space
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Care International in Jordan

CARE is running projects promoting permaculture technologies to restore soil fertility to produce crops with less water and no chemical additives.

These small projects have demonstrated clear benefits for rural families.Working through local community groups, farmers are selected to benefit while demonstrating to others the advantages of permaculture.

Revolving loans also ensure that technologies, including grey water reuse systems, water harvesting and poultry management, are available to a wide range of people.

Source: CARE International

I’m in Nuccups, Karamoja in northern Uganda, close the Kenyan border. This area has had the biggest impact from cattle raiding and illegal weapons.

Development here is retarded, even by Ugandan standards. It’s still seen as the badlands of Karamoja by outsiders. To me, its amazing mountain scenery and rich soils with the potential to turn this area into Uganda’s food-bowl. Before that happens there are some serious challenges here to address…

It’s 8am and I’m waiting in a vehicle with the driver for the military escort to arrive to escort us on a 40-minute drive to Namalu. I observe the villagers in the huts opposite our stationary vehicle. They are totally drunk. Two people are having a fistfight, one is a woman. She throws a punch and trips and the man she is fighting kicks her in the guts as she goes down. The driver tells me they begin drinking the local sorghum brew made in plastic jerry cans at dawn. I ask him where they get the sorghum if they are drunk all the time. They couldn’t farm it because they can barley walk by 10 am. He tells me it is the sorghum delivered as food-aid. Great, the world aid programs are helping these people stay drunk for the rest of their life? Do the donors know what they are paying for?

The pickup truck with 4 soldiers arrives and after a quick radio check we take off following the pickup belching black exhaust and dust. I tell the driver to keep well back so we don’t have to breathe their dust and if the lead vehicle is ambushed we have some measure of escape. It’s a beautiful day and the sun reflects off the shear rock faces on the side of the mountain range, wet from the nights rain. I can make out jungle canopies in the ravines sloping off the mountain ridges. I bet there is some cool wildlife up in there, I think to myself. We pass small villages of mud huts with their stick palisades and grass roofs. We could be travelling back in time for all I know. A few raggedy school kids are trying to flag us down for a lift as we roar past them. In the bigger settlements I see the same problem, more drinking. Men and women are staggering around and the driver sits on the horn to warn the drunks off the track.

In Namalu I scope out the training venue, a guesthouse-café under construction. I’m here for a week’s master training of the Green Warriors. I have checked out their village projects and worked out their weak points. During this week, we’ll sort out those problems. Integrated Pest Management, fencing, Inter-planting and seed saving are the subjects for this stage of the training.

The guesthouse is a concrete building, on an acre of land with a beautiful craggy mountain behind but no water supply. The mountain has caves and ledges and I can see a troop of baboons making their way across the ridgeline.

I spy a bore-pump in the clinic next door to the venue. It has about 3 acres of fenced land and I can see the local community use the bore-pump as their water supply. That’ll do nicely! I take my translator and we pay a visit to the manageress of the health clinic. In a short time we have worked out a mutually beneficial 1-week project. My Green Warriors will build the perfect bore-pump garden at the front of the clinic grounds with 14 types of vegetables, some passionfruit on the fence and a stack of trees around the outside. The health clinic staff will attend the training and maintain the garden. The staff get the produce and the community will watch and learn and hopefully copy this type of food production system. It’s the women mostly, visiting the community health centre.

We begin the digging, 25 Green Warriors and a few health staff. The wastewater from the hand pump will irrigate the garden. At the bore-pump there is a group of skinny children trying to pump the handle. I go over and take the handle and begin pumping for them. These little dudes don’t speak English but I gesture for them to fill their 5 litre containers. It’s hard to tell the boys from the girls as they all have baldy heads and are wearing dirty rags, the type you dig up out of a rubbish pit. I see sores un-healed all over their legs. Some sores are weeping puss. From the looks of their teeth they must be between 8-10 years old but their bodies are the size of Australian 4 year olds. These kids are starving to death slowly.

I ask the matron what’s the deal with all the sick looking children. She explains the parents are too drunk most times to care for their children. The parents feed their kids only the brew waste at the bottom of the Gerry can. She says that even the kids here are drunk and she has treated many 3 year olds for alcohol poisoning. The brewer’s waste is still quite potent in its alcohol content. She continues to tell me the other health problems in the local communities. Malaria is the biggest killer in the local people. For women the next one is pneumonia. The women do all the work here from early in the morning to late at night. In a day they must gather firewood, make the meals, plant and harvest crops, carry water from the borehole and sometimes work late into the night with never a days rest.

The rains come when the woman is in the field and she gets drenched when her body is run down. Where are the men? There are waiting at home sheltered in the hut waiting for the woman to come home with the water and firewood to cook dinner for them. The man is the head of the household and tells the woman to do all the work while he kicks back with some local brew. The men’s health problems are STD’s from raping enemy village women on cattle raids, the matron tells me. Not many smiles in this part of Karamoja. I reckon the women also drink to get out of working so hard.

The weeks’ training goes well. There are now over 80 trained Green Warriors across Karamoja. In the short time we’ve been doing this project we can prove this is the way forward after 40 years of food-aid. The sites where the Green Warriors have set up gardens are productive and many new vegetables and growing skills have been introduced. The next thing to happen here should be working in the schools with the kids. The kids can grow food and tree seedlings at their schools. The kids are capable and learn fast. The adults are too hard to deal with when they drink like this.

I’m walking back to the venue for lunch with a hoe over my shoulder with a few Green Warriors when a man sitting under a shady tree greets me in the Karamajong language,”ajoka!” he says. I say ,”ajok”. He says something else and the Green Warriors laugh. “He is saying God bless you Father, he thinks you are a priest”. Says one of my guys. “Tell him God blesses those who get off their asses and do something” I say. They laugh but don’t translate.

I stand on the hill next to the site, looking across a huge plain with one of the traditional land owners. From here to the horizon many small fires are burning. The landowner tells me the plain used to be a vast forest with elephants, giraffe and all the African animals. Now the charcoal makers are cutting it down for cooking fuel for the cities. It’s a lot of work for little money but poverty drives slavery. ”What’s the solution?” asks my mind automatically…

I imagine the kids of Karamoja growing a million trees at the local schools and replanting coppicing forests to supply charcoal sustainably. Yeah, fast growing trees that one third of the branches are harvested and fed into the charcoal ovens and the trees supply the same again each year. They could feed the leaves to animals. I ask myself how can I help make it happen? If nothing is done then all the vegetation on this plain will go in the next 5 years, then they will start on the mountains. I think about those skinny little sick kids. Maybe, just maybe, we can solve many problems at the one time…HMMM?

Darren Doherty gives the very last Tagari PDC delivered to a Permaculture Sydney North organised group in Bega Australia.

Darren Doherty delivers a Community Supported Agriculture Tagari certified PDC (Permaculture Designers Certificate) to a class organised by Permaculture Sydney North

Darren working the angles

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Darren explains his family permaculture, keyline, and holistic management business, Felix Permaculture and Regenerative Agriculture (RegenAG)

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Darren profiles Permaculture co-founders Bill Mollison and David Holmgren; Tagari or The Permaculture Institute of Bill and Lisa Mollison in Tasmania and also David Holmgren’s business in Victoria

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Darren profiles Milkwood Permaculture, co-founders of Regenerative Agriculture

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Darren profiles permaculture pioneer Robyn Francis of the Permaculture College of Australia, former editor of Permaculture International Journal and co-founder of Accredited Permaculture Training (APT) Nimbin Australia

Filmed by Chris Wallis and Lachlan Storrie of Hunter Valley-based Tree Frog Permaculture

Filmed for Permaculture.TV courtesy of Permaculture Sydney North and Darren Doherty

The second week of my 2-week community sustainability course starts off with a bang, literally!

A huge lightning storm is moving through our valley. I watch it coming from my hut window. I like seeing nature getting a recharge from the lightning strikes. Suddenly there’s a huge bright flash. A lightning strike hits maybe 40 meters from me on the other side of the road. The sound is so loud my skeleton just about jumps out of my meat suit! The light from the strike for an instant almost gives me a suntan. SHIT! I find out later the strike fried our Internet. Back to the stone age…

My filmmaker friend Zaff is back. We collaborate on making short, how-to-do-it films for the Green warriors. We work out a basic script and I line up the students as the actors. Its nerve wracking for some of these Karamajong. Zaff pushes them pretty hard to get a result but hey, they’re Green Warriors, they can take it. We do films on making a banana pit, building a trellis, constructing and planting a home garden and planting trees with mulch and tree guards made with African bamboo. The biggest problem for Zaff is background noise. People talking, constant hammering from our other projects and the annoying revving of vehicles, which local drivers like to do before driving off somewhere.

Duck-vegas...Fertilizer factory

Our duck pond is complete. I watch the newly arrived ducks happily splashing around in the above ground brick tank. This system works as a fertilizer factory. Each week we use watering cans and fill them up in the pond. We water everything that is planted. The duck juice gives a real boost to the soils. We get eggs, meat, fertilizer and pest control and feed them only the scraps from the kitchen. The Ugandans love it!

On the second last night we hold a talent competition between the three groups of students. They act out plays and sing songs and end their show with traditional dances. It is a wild night supercharged with another lightning show from Mother Nature. I’m careful not to blaspheme!

One group sings a beautiful song about the environment. It touches my heart and I feel a lump growing in my throat.

These are the words to their song:

What will people say when the land is dry?
What will the animals do when the bush is burnt?
What will God alone say about the environment?

Nature forgive us
Mother forgive us

Nature forgive us
Mother forgive us

Cheetahs are crying loud
Monkeys have done the same
Buffalos are running away
Birds have done the same
Where will they go will be the question mark.

Chorus

Brothers will plant the trees
Sisters will plant the trees
Youth will plant this land
Fathers will protect our land

Their beautiful African voices beat any choir I’ve ever heard in Australia. The competition finishes with the usual grand finale every in for the big dance. The drummers are almost flogging the skins of their traditional drums as the feet slam into the ground. The energy of these dudes is fantastic and I have to call it to a halt because I have to announce the winner and the rain is almost upon us. At the very end I tell them what a wonderful crew of Green Warriors they are and we do our final African clap to close the night.

One, Two, Three! CLAP A huge lightning bolt slams into the mountain behind the warriors and lights up the surroundings like daylight just as the group clap. WOW!

I head back to my hut as the sky bursts open with another deluge.

I say goodbye to each of the groups of Green Warriors as they depart in various vehicles. I know this has been the best experience in their life for some of them. Their new hand tools are loaded into the vehicles and there are hugs and handshakes all round. They will miss each other. These people over the last 2 weeks have built many things together and solved many difficult problems to stretch their brains.

I watch them drive down the muddy track, hands still waving as the cars disappear around the bend. Go well Green Warriors!

Source: Steve Cran, Uganda

I’m alive and I’m back training the next batch of Community Sustainability Specialists (alias Green Warriors).

I’ve been back in Uganda for almost 2 weeks now after repairing my body in Australia form the ravages of malaria, typhoid and a lung infection. It’s amazing how fast your body caves in once your immune system is compromised. The trick is to give yourself enough time to repair before going back into the field. Maybe I should listen to my own advice more often!

Before the training starts, the staff and I conduct interviews to determine who’s suitable to become a Green Warrior. I sit the team down-wind of the interviewees. This is so I can smell alcohol coming from their body and clothes. In Karamoja, heavy drinking is a pastime for people in poverty. In fact a lot of their grog is home made from the food given to them by aid organizations. Sorghum and millet are brewed in plastic jerry cans which sell for $3-$7 a jerry. If a candidate reeks of alcohol at 3pm we have a good idea he or she is a heavy drinker and we bypass them for a more suitable person. Some dudes smell so strong I ask them one question, “what’s your name?” and that’s the end of the interview. The team and I have special signals with our eyes when we have a winner or a loser.

The training kicks off with the trainees getting issued a tent, bedding, a sleeping mat and a set of farm tools, quite a haul by local standards. Salome, one of our staff has to take the women to the toilets and teach them how to use it hygienically. Most of them have never seen a toilet or a flush system. They watch Salome push the lever and gasp in amazement as the water spirals down the pan. It takes them a few days and an irate cleaner to get it right. The men have to use a pit toilet we dug at the back of the field away from the camp. It has several luxury features like 2 squat holes with wooden covers and an ash bucket to smother any flies on the faeces. It also has a tap and soap outside for personal hygiene. We’ll fit a roof, next training.

There’s a brick kitchen now with a large 2 burner mud stove that the last course built. The cook ladies tell me it is very efficient and they want one at their homes. The builders are still building the bush kitchen around the cooks as they work.

We begin the training with 50 trainees but only have the resources for 44. I have to wean the numbers down over the first few days by watching them during the fieldwork. The lazy ones go home and don’t come back. Fieldwork sorts them out quickly. I give them the rules of the camp, which are quite simple. Get along with each other and no drinking in the camp unless it’s a special occasion authorized by staff.

Each day is the practical field work first and the theory second. This may seem upside down to conventional trainers but I find it gets a better result. After the trainees for example have constructed a home garden, they are much more interested in the theory and they comprehend it at a greater depth.

On day three Salome comes and sees me with an urgent problem. She tells me 2 trainees were drunk last night and almost caused a riot. One was riding his motorcycle between the packed rows of tents pissed out of his mind on local brew. I front the 2 idiots up out the back of the training hut. Unfortunately they are 2 guys from the same village and they show great aptitude for the training…I decide not to send them home but they must be punished. An hour later they are stripped to the waist, each digging a grey water pit 1.5 meters deep, out the back of the new kitchen. The other trainees have a laugh at them while they are eating breakfast. If these dudes weren’t seen to be punished the trainees would have done it themselves the next night.

Today is Election Day and half the students have walked off to their villages to cast their vote for federal and local leaders. The handful of trainees left, and I, construct a brick duck tank. The duck tank has a multifunction purpose. Our ducks get a swim and we get duck manure infused water to irrigate our gardens with. It’s a self-producing liquid manure factory.

The women mix the mortar and the men lay the bricks. I join in the digging and the students tell me they have never seen a white man dig before. I tell them I have never seen a black man on a computer before, we all laugh at each other. At lunchtime the team wont break for lunch as they only have one more course of bricks to lay.

They are a solid bunch of Green Warriors. They do what has to be done. In a few weeks they will be training their own people and setting up demonstration community gardens. Karamajong teaching Karamajong, creating the Green Warrior ripple effect., so far it’s working!

The rooster crows but the hen delivers says Jim Hightower, author of Swim Against the Current: Worker Cooperatives and a New, Deeply Democratic Model for This Country

Texas populist, commentator, and author Jim Hightower has a few words of wisdom for us: Question authority, trust your values, seek alternatives, break away, stand up for your beliefs, and swim against the current!

http://www.vimeo.com/14443766

His latest book, Swim Against the Current, which features worker cooperatives, introduces readers to people across the country who have actually done this-people in business, politics, health care, farming, religion, and other areas who are taking charge, living their values, doing good, and doing well.

Hightower and co-author Susan DeMarco show how they are doing precisely what the elites want us to believe can’t be done: changing their lives and making a difference. He tells the stories of these people and offers inspiration and information that will help readers tap into their own maverick potential in order to navigate a different, more satisfying course of their own.

Whether they are young and just starting out or older and searching for a different path, the commonsense folks in this book have escaped the corporate tentacles to find their own way toward a richer life and a better American future. They are creating a new, deeply democratic model for the country, edging it back onto the long road toward egalitarianism and the common good.

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Sustainable Productions LLC is a New York based independent production company. Founded in Bozeman Montana by Eric Chaikin in 2005, the company operates on the premise that media has the ability to provoke change in the world and may therefore be used as a tool to perpetuate ideas of sustainability.

http://sustainablepro.com

Interview with Scott Kellogg, co-author of Toolbox for Sustainable City Living: A Do-It-Ourselves Guide, co-founder of the Rhizome Collective of Austin, Texas

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background and introduction; links between global justice and sustainabilit

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about the Rhizome Collective

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the goals of urban sustainability

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greatest achivements

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why a warehouse?

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who joined the collective ?

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de-centralised, networks of sustainability micro-industries

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the eviction of the Rhizome Collective by the City of Austin

New videos uploaded from Pathways to Sustainable Self Governance, the Detroit USSF2010 workshop organized by Permaculture TV.   Excerpt from workshop description:

This workshop outlines a vision for a democratic, worker-owned, advanced industrial ecology society. We seek pathways to provide the burgeoning food education/justice movement with the tools to become economically sustainable, and to link the emerging green industrial worker cooperatives with them into sovereign networks. Once active, such networks can become the basis for sustainable, socially just communities that revitalize locales via open source sustainable agriculture and manufacturing methods. Our panel — with academic, commercial, and school of hard knocks experience — will frame the demonstrated solutions, numerous pieces of the puzzle that we as a society need to put together.

Gavin Raders explains how, where, and to what effect Planting Justice implements their ecologically sound and socially just philosophy.   Videos below include a 30-second excerpt on the utility of city waste streams, followed by 6 sequential videos that comprise Gavin’s presentation at our USSF 2010 workshop.  Great stuff!

Espousing and embodying the Permaculture meme, “the problem is the solution”. Gavin Raders on the utility of city waste streams: http://www.vimeo.com/13797340  Video Credit:  Patrick O’Connor of Oakland Sol

Introduction. Planting Justice (guiding principles) combines grassroots organizing with Permaculture to simultaneously address the food, economic, ecological, knowledge, and non-profit crises: http://www.vimeo.com/13797422  Video Credit:  Patrick O’Connor of Oakland Sol

Permaculture, “just a word until it is put into practice”. In 1.5 years, Planting Justice has installed 60 permaculture gardens in homes, schools, affordable housing complexes, community centers, and at San Quentin Correctional Facility. Gavin encourages us to just get started, and advocates using their open-source resources, e.g. those available at http://plantingjustice.org/resources/sample-designs : http://www.vimeo.com/13797559  Video Credit:  Patrick O’Connor of Oakland Sol

Implementing the Permaculture meme, “stacking functions” in an economic sense. Gavin describes how Planting Justice (programs) enacts a Permaculture Business Model: http://www.vimeo.com/13797656  Video Credit:  Patrick O’Connor of Oakland Sol

Projects. Optimal locales for installations with maximum benefit are institutions such as churches and community centers, which have the dual advantages of already being social meeting places and of owning land.  Gavin describes how the learning process is often mutual, as Planting Justice (projects) facilitates installations at a local middle school, at San Quentin Prison, and at affordable housing complexes: http://www.vimeo.com/13797759  Video Credit:  Patrick O’Connor of Oakland Sol

Why City Permaculture?  Planting Justice embodies the Permaculture philosophy “the problem is the solution“.  Gavin Raders quotes Grace Lee Boggs “crises are opportunities“, and explains how advantageous cities waste streams can be when pollution is simply treated as mis-placed nutrients: http://www.vimeo.com/13797848  Video Credit:  Patrick O’Connor of Oakland Sol

Conclusion. Gavin Raders of Planting Justice encourages us to replicate their efforts, and to build sustainable and regenerative businesses off of the waste streams of cities.  Check their website for free educational workshops upcoming at their Oakland space: http://www.vimeo.com/13797924  Video Credit:  Patrick O’Connor of Oakland Sol

** Up next in this series: USSF 2010 videos of Quinton Sankofa and James Berk of Mandela Marketplace and Mandela Foods **

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from Nicholas Roberts, Permaculture.coop
to pil-pc-oceania-owner@mailman.aboc.net.au,
permaculture
date Mon, Jul 19, 2010 at 2:26 PM
subject Permaculture BLOGs free cooperative
mailed-by gmail.com
hide details 2:26 PM (40 minutes ago)
hi all

I have upgraded Permaculture TV and placed it within a blog hosting network http://permaculture.tv

I am trialling a new blog server, a Permaculture BLOGs free cooperative http://blogs.permaculture.coop

this forms a social network like Facebook, Ning, WiserEarth etc within the namespace permaculture.coop (our soon to be registered cooperative)

you can register and create a blog (conditional on some yet to be decided common-sense business rules i.e. nothing illegal, immoral, no massive loads)

register for an account and a blog
http://blogs.permaculture.coop/register/

if you do register and I approve the blog, you can do most of the things a WordPress site can do i.e .create/edit pages, posts, themes, social media integration (Facebook/Twitter), embed video, upload images and audio etc

nowadays Ning is charging money and WiserEarth is struggling (according to information I have from anonymous WiserEarth officials) so it makes sense to explore other arrangements and business models..

Ning and WiserEarth host many of the permaculture and transition community

for the technical, the website is running WordPress 3.0 with multisite options, with the BuddyPress social networking plugins

*******WARNING*******************

be warned this is a BETA service and is provided as is, with no warranty or guarentees, its subject to changes and editing at my discretion

*******WARNING*******************

am looking at also creating a Transition Cooperative server too, within the Transition.coop namespace, more on that soon

let me know what you think

cheers

-N

Nicholas Roberts & Kirstie Stramler

Denmark 36 96 49 02
Australia 02 8003 6993
USA 310 598 2989

Permaculture Cooperative R&D project
skype permaculturecoop
email permaculturecoop@gmail.com

news http://news.permaculture.coop
groups http://permaculturegroups.org
plans http://gaiapermaculture.com
video http://www.Permaculture.TV

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