Caroline Riley Carberry - One World Permaculture

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In this episode, I speak with Caroline Riley of One World Permaculture and her work to teach permaculture to children and adults. A member of the Austin Permaculture Guild, she teaches at the Austin Community College and assists her husband, Michael Carberry, at the Whole Life Learning Center.

Her permaculture instructors include Dick Pierce, Jude Hobbs, and Andrew Millison. We talk about her introduction to permaculture, cross cultural work with children in the United States and Zambia, an upcoming project in India, as well as the vibrant permaculture scene in Austin, TX. You can learn more about her work by visiting: One World Permaculture Other resources mentioned in this show: Advanced Teacher Training in Youth and Child Permaculture Education with Patty Parks-Wasserman, Matthew Bibeau, and Kelly Hogan. Amala Foundation Arise Africa Barton Springs Last Child in the Woods Mother Earth School Rhizome Collective Square Foot Gardening Sustainable Food Center

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Episode ID
AZ8T211ED51C

Permabyte: An Introduction to Transition Towns

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A quick, no-frills, whirlwind tour of the Transition Town process to provide an overview ahead of the interview with Susan Norris and Nathan Spivey of Transition Harrisburg.

If you would like to learn more about Transition before listening to that episode, please read Rob Hopkin's website: Transition Culture If, after reading that site, your interest to dive deeper into Transition is sparked, here are some recommended books: The Transition Handbook: From Oil Dependency to Local Resilience by Rob Hopkins The Transition Timeline: For a Local, Resilient Future by Shaun Chamberlin Local Food: How to Make it Happen in Your Community by Tamzin Pinkerton and Rob Hopkins Local Money: How to Make it Happen in Your Community by Peter North Local Sustainable Homes: How to Make Them Happen in Your Community by Chris Bird

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4ZMBA11ED51E

Ross Crutchfield - Making A Homestead

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In this episode I speak with Ross Crutchfield of Making A Homestead, his site devoted to the projects and experiences of building his homestead one day at a time. Ross and I know each other from The Survival Podcast forum, which you will hear mentioned several times. The forums are an offshoot of Jack Spirko's The Survival Podcast, which is dedicated to "Living a better life, if time's get tough or even if they don't." Ross learned about Permaculture through Jack's podcast and Will Hooker's videos from hisIntroduction to Permaculture Class (HS432/HS590). Listen to Ross talk about the challenges, failures, and successes of improving his own piece of suburbia. If you are looking for a ways to begin changing your Zone 0 and Zone 1 his site has many hands on projects to get you started. Resources from this interview: Freecycle, where user's give away items they no longer need. How to Build a Top Bar Hive by Philip Chandler Peaceful Valley Farm and Garden Supply He sent me a message after the show about a smartphone app that he uses when planting called Sun Seeker Lite, available for both the iPhone and Android platforms.

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HFBS511ED520

Rachel Kaplan - Urban Homesteading

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I had a great time interviewing Rachel and am thankful for her, and co-author K. Ruby Blume's, perspectives on living a regenerative lifestyle based in permaculture. The artwork and photographs in the book are wonderful, it's well written, easy to understand, and contain a number of hands-on projects to get you started in whatever your area of interest may be. The chaptering of the book is a logical progression, with each chapter containing a description of the subject, information on it, interviews with people or organizations and how they are working with the idea, and hands-on projects.  Throughout there are some sidebars with more information and in some chapters a time frame you can use to implement gradually and not get overwhelmed. My favorite parts of this book are the Principles of Urban Homesteading, the interviews, the hands-on projects, and the inclusion, and focus on, the non-material. The Principles of Urban Homesteading reflect the way the Principles of Permaculture arose over time through the action of it's practitioners. They reveal a way to consider the urban environment while trying to practice permaculture there. The interviews are reminders that others face the same challenges we do.  I find them empowering and inspiring. Many books on Permaculture can be overwhelming with the amount of knowledge and information that is imparted in just a few pages. Rachel and Ruby have spread that out and the projects help to give us little things to focus on and then take action.  The reader can move forward without being caught up in paralysis by analysis trying to figure out "What do I do next? There's so much!".  Find something you like and do it.  Many of these can be done in an afternoon with supplies you already have at your home. The non-material is something that, though we discuss it as being part of our ever growing need to implement permanent-culture, I feel it is often overlooked as the focus becomes one of design, food, and stable ecosystems.  We also need to work on our stable social-systems. Urban Homesteading: Heirloom Skills for Sustainable Living now has a permanent place on my book shelf and is on the short list of recommended reads for people beginning their path to permaculture.  If you've been doing this for a while and want something for someone who is still on the fence, this is the book. You can buy the book directly from the authors at: https://urban-homesteading.org/ And, if you'd like to listen to Rachel speak and possibly get to meet her, she will be at the Northeast Permaculture Convergence July 22-24, 2011.   Note:  I received my copy of Urban Homesteading from Skyhorse Publishing, Inc. for review.  Only after reading it cover to cover, and feeling it would be a value to you my audience, did I contact Rachel for the interview.

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P8G8U11ED529