Discover Permaculture - The Podcast copertina

Discover Permaculture - The Podcast

Discover Permaculture - The Podcast

Di: Discover Permaculture
Ascolta gratuitamente

A proposito di questo titolo

Host Geoff Lawton & guests discuss how to fight back against ecological collapse not with fear or hostility, but with design, community, and purpose. This podcast explores permaculture design solutions for every climate and at every scale. Real stories. Real designs. Real hope.© 2025 Discover Permaculture, LLC Scienza Scienze biologiche Scienze sociali
  • What is Culture?
    Feb 1 2026

    What is culture, really? Is it food, clothing, music, beliefs — or something deeper? In this conversation, host Geoff Lawton and the panel explore culture through the lens of permaculture. From local food systems and ethics to migration, religion, consumerism and identity, the discussion keeps circling back to one core idea: culture emerges from place. When culture is disconnected from land, ecology, and local production, it becomes fragile, conflicted, and easy to manipulate. But when it’s rooted in care for the Earth and each other, culture becomes resilient and worth passing on.

    Watch the video episode here.

    Key Takeaways:

    00:00–02:00: Culture is not a trend or an identity label. It grows out of how people live with land, food, and each other over time.

    01:30–03:00: Agriculture and food systems sit at the foundation of every culture. Change the way food is grown, and culture changes with it.

    03:30–07:30: Belief systems and religion have historically provided shared ethics that guide behaviour, responsibility, and community life.

    07:30–10:30: Ethics are the invisible structure beneath culture. They shape how societies treat land, food, and one another.

    14:30–16:00: Culture is deeply shaped by place — climate, soil, resources, and what can be grown locally.

    17:00–19:30: Modern consumer culture disconnects people from land and food, replacing relationship with convenience and consumption.

    21:00–23:30: Local food systems create resilience and diversity, while centralized systems lead to sameness and cultural loss.

    22:30–24:00: When landscapes become homogenized, cultures begin to homogenize as well. Shopping malls and global supply chains are symptoms of this shift.

    26:30–28:30: Understanding other cultures requires context. Practices make sense when viewed through climate, history, and local conditions rather than judgment.

    27:30–30:30: Religion, culture, and ethics often overlap, functioning as systems that organise behaviour and shared responsibility.

    34:00–37:00: Culture is not static. It evolves — and can either degrade through extraction or regenerate through care and design.

    40:30–43:30: Permaculture provides a framework for consciously designing culture using ethics, ecology, and cooperation.

    43:30–46:00: The ethics of earth care, people care, and returning surplus offer a foundation for rebuilding resilient, place-based cultures.

    46:00–48:00 (end): A regenerative future depends on rebuilding culture from the ground up, starting with soil, food, and ethical responsibility.

    Mostra di più Mostra meno
    1 ora
  • Wildfires: How to Design a World that Doesn't Burn
    Jan 26 2026

    Wildfires aren’t just getting bigger — they’re behaving differently. In this episode, Host Geoff Lawton, Eric, Ben and Sam are joined by special guest Matthew Trumm to unpack why modern “mega-fires” burn hotter, faster, and across vast areas and what land design has to do with it. From degraded ecosystems and fuel loads to wind, water, and soil, this conversation explores how human decisions have reshaped fire behavior. The discussion also looks at Indigenous cultural burning, landscape buffers, and permaculture design strategies that reduce fire risk, offering a grounded and practical lens on how we can design landscapes and communities, that don’t burn.

    Watch the video episode here.

    Key Takeaways:

    00:11:50 – 00:16:30: Mega-fires aren’t normal wildfires. They’re driven by wind, heavy dry fuel loads, and degraded ecosystems, allowing fire to move into the canopy and accelerate rapidly.

    00:13:40 – 00:15:40: When forests lose grazing, ground cover management, and soil health, excess fuel builds up — allowing fire to climb into the treetops and spread uncontrollably.

    00:17:45 – 00:19:40: Open, simplified landscapes allow wind to accelerate. Well-designed buffer zones — trees, water, and earthworks — slow wind and reduce fire intensity.

    00:16:30 – 00:18:20: Low-intensity, intentional fire has long been used by Indigenous cultures to reduce fuel loads, protect ecosystems, and prevent catastrophic burns.

    00:35:55 – 00:36:45: Designs that work with natural systems require less energy and are more resilient. Forced systems rely on constant inputs — and tend to fail under stress.

    00:38:10 – 00:41:30: Degraded landscapes spiral toward desertification and disaster. Regenerative design rebuilds soil, holds water, and restores ecological balance.

    00:41:30 – 00:47:00: Start with water, restore soil, reduce fuel loads, and design buffers. Fire resilience is built long before fire season begins.

    Mostra di più Mostra meno
    1 ora e 39 min
  • Nationalism and the Permaculture Nation
    Jan 18 2026
    In this wide-ranging and deeply human conversation, host Geoff Lawton & Ben, Eric and Sam explore nationalism, immigration, borders and belonging through a permaculture lens. Drawing on Bill Mollison’s definition of a nation as a shared ethic — not a geographic boundary — the discussion reframes global challenges around scarcity, migration, labor and wealth. This is not a political debate. It’s a systems conversation about ethics, ecology and what it really means to belong. Watch the video episode here. Key Takeaways: 00:00 – 01:21 - The episode sets the stage by questioning modern nationalism and its confusion with patriotism. 01:38 – 02:15 - A nation is redefined through permaculture as a shared ethic and worldview, not borders or race. 02:15 – 03:07 - Ethnic nationalism is unpacked as a historical and dangerous distortion of identity. 03:09 – 06:29 - Economic stress, immigration, and labor exploitation are explored as systemic issues rather than moral failures. 06:30 – 08:21 - Modern borders and immigration are revealed as recent constructs that ignore historic movement and trade. 08:46 – 10:29 - Blame is shifted away from immigrants and toward concentrated wealth, power, and policy decisions. 10:29 – 12:41 - Survival instinct, territory, and human behavior are examined through both ecological and social lenses. 13:19 – 15:27 - Passport privilege highlights global inequality and the uneven experience of “freedom of movement.” 16:05 – 17:55 - Scarcity mindset vs. abundance mindset becomes a central theme, tying directly into permaculture ethics. 18:38 – 20:50 - Resource-rich nations suffering poverty reveal how systems, not nature, create deprivation. 21:26 – 22:41 - Geoff introduces the idea of a “permaculture nation” — a global identity rooted in care and action. 22:41 – 27:37 - Immigration reframed as an opportunity for land repair, skill-building, and eventual regeneration at home. 27:37 – 30:19 - Personal responsibility, consumer choices, and voting with time and labor are emphasized. 31:27 – 33:08 - Wealth is redefined as food, water, air, community, and resilience — not money. 33:08 – 35:13 - Local action and community engagement are positioned as real power outside financial systems. 35:13 – End - The episode closes by questioning unchecked systems while affirming permaculture as a practical, hopeful path forward.
    Mostra di più Mostra meno
    1 ora e 42 min
Ancora nessuna recensione