Permaculture Gardening

Permaculture Gardening

What is permaculture? The term “permaculture” comes from a combination of “permanent” and “agriculture.” It is a dynamic system of design principles and ethics used to inform how we approach agriculture and managed landscapes. Permaculture is as much an art as a science, because the designs also depend on the creativity and ingenuity of the gardener.

Permaculture emerged as an approach in the late 1960’s and 1970’s following the Club of Rome work known for its influential 1972 report, “The Limits to Growth.” This collaborative report explored the potential consequences of unchecked population growth, industrialization, resource depletion, and pollution.  Permaculture emerged as a systems-based approach standing in contradiction to monoculture-style agriculture which quickly depletes soil other resources causing imbalances in natural populations.

Permaculture incorporates the tenets of organic gardening (focus on soil health, avoiding synthetic inputs, nutrient cycling, and natural pest control) and then goes beyond these principles to expand to a systems view of the agricultural process. It can be scaled from large to small areas and was intended to be implemented by individuals and groups during the time period when our dependence on other systems for food and energy production are experiencing crisis.

David Holmgren and Bill Mollison pioneered the twelve principles and three ethics that are the foundation of permaculture design. The 12 principles can be used to plan a garden, but also can be used as a person manages the garden through time. The principles are dynamic and help guide good decision making every day for managing the garden whether large or small.

One of my favorite proverbs to come from this work is that “the problem is the solution.” This is a handy reminder for working in natural systems that an excess of something (weeds, sun, heat, etc.) must be viewed from a systems approach as an excess of a potential resource. Our task as gardeners becomes recognizing imbalances and figuring out ways to use those resources as opportunities. For example: Too many weeds? Use them to make fertilizer! Too much sun? Grow trees that can provide a yield as a byproduct. Too many pests? Attract predators to eat them…..

The Problem is the Solution

Bill Mollison

12 Principles of Permaculture

Principle 1: Observe & Interact

Principle 2: Catch & Store Energy

Principle 3: Obtain a Yield

Principle 4: Apply Self-Regulation & Accept Feedback

Principle 5: Use & Value Renewable Resources & Services

Principle 6: Produce No Waste

Principle 7: Design From Patterns to Details

Principle 8: Integrate Rather than Segregate

Principle 9: Use Small and Slow Solutions

Principle 10: Use and Value Diversity

Principle 11: Use Edges & Value the Marginal

Principle 12: Creatively Use & Respond to Change

Three Ethics of Permaculture

Care for the Earth

Rebuild Nature’s Capital

Care for People

Care of Self, Kin, and Community

Fair Share

Limit Use and Redistribute Surplus

Permaculture Principles Expressed in Wild Bee Garden

West-Facing Garden

Using Permaculture Principles to Design a West-Facing Garden ‘The Problem is the Solution…’ Permaculture Principle 1: Observe & Interact When I started working toward a garden on Saulsbury street, a few challenges were already very obvious. First, the front yard garden is west-facing and that means it gets the sunniest and…

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Additional Information About Permaculture

If you want to learn more about permaculture, consult some of the classics below. They will help lead you to more information from other corners of the world that may be useful for your particular project.

Aranya. 2012. Permaculture Design: A Step-by-Step Guide. White River Junction: Chelsea Green Publishing Company.

Bell, Graham. 1994. The Permaculture Garden. White River Junction: Chelsea Green Publishing Company.

Holmgren, David. 2002 (revised 2017, 2020). Permaculture: Principles and Pathways Beyond Sustainability. Hepburn, Victoria, Australia: Melliodora Publishing.

Jabs, Carolyn. 1984. The Heirloom Gardener. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books.

Meadows, Donella H. et al. 1972. The Limits to Growth: A Report for the Club of Rome’s Project on the Predicament of Mankind. New York: Universe Books.

Richards, Huw. 2025. The Permaculture Garden: A Practical Approach to Year-Round Harvests. New York: Penguin Random House.

Stevens, Crystal. 2020. Your Edible Yard: Landscaping with Fruits and Vegetables. British Columbia, Canada: New Society Publishers.

The Herb Lady. 2005. Edible Landscaping in the Desert Southwest: Wheelbarrow to Plate. Mesa: O’ Danny Boy Ltd.