




The One Circle diets are very useful for planning the garden, though, even if you choose to raise some animal products as supplements.


Quinny wrote: if we were to look at self sufficiency, I personally believe that animal husbandry is important.
But they do tend to take up extra room. "One Circle" is about providing a complete diet in the smallest possible space.


Ludi wrote:Gardening video showing methods inspired by Fukuoka's work.






This is so important to me now after a lifetime of gardening. I'd rather the animals do the work. Isn't this really the highest form of permaculture, working smart instead of working hard? From a personal energy accounting doesn't it make sense to let the chicken find the cricket or the worm, eat it and bring back the protein to the coop for my breakfast egg? Otherwise I am seeding, cultivating, harvesting, composting. With chicken you just throw out the food scraps into their pen. Pigs will even thermodepolymerize poopLudi wrote:Quinny wrote: if we were to look at self sufficiency, I personally believe that animal husbandry is important.
100% agree. Animals can eat stuff we can't, and turn it into nutritious yummy products.But they do tend to take up extra room. "One Circle" is about providing a complete diet in the smallest possible space.
I think Carla Emery's book is a fantastic resource, I refer to it regularly. I don't have any books by John Seymour yet.













pstarr wrote:This is so important to me now after a lifetime of gardening. I'd rather the animals do the work. Isn't this really the highest form of permaculture, working smart instead of working hard? From a personal energy accounting doesn't it make sense to let the chicken find the cricket or the worm, eat it and bring back the protein to the coop for my breakfast egg? Otherwise I am seeding, cultivating, harvesting, composting. With chicken you just throw out the food scraps into their pen. Pigs will even thermodepolymerize poopLudi wrote:Quinny wrote: if we were to look at self sufficiency, I personally believe that animal husbandry is important.
100% agree. Animals can eat stuff we can't, and turn it into nutritious yummy products.But they do tend to take up extra room. "One Circle" is about providing a complete diet in the smallest possible space.
I think Carla Emery's book is a fantastic resource, I refer to it regularly. I don't have any books by John Seymour yet.![]()
I've never read a vegan anti-livestock study that satisfied me. One that measures and compares local small-scale meat production into human food and energy . . . against a native ungulate/predator system for environmental effects.
In another words, were 100 million buffaloes and associated dire wolves, sabertooth tigers, and Ursus spelaeus (the cave bear) all eating, pissing, rooting, rutting, and rotting that much better for the environment than a chicken coop, or a goats and sheep, or even a few Scottish Long Horn Cattle in the back 5 acres?
It is not meat production but industrial meat production that is wrong. But then industrial grain production is awful. It is the basis of all that is wrong with agriculture.









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