Permaculture in Brittany

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Building Healthy Soil From the Ground Up: A Practical Guide to Living Earth

Soil is the single most important asset on any permaculture site, yet it is often the most neglected. Many new growers focus on which plants to put in the ground without first asking whether the ground itself is alive. Healthy soil is not simply dirt with some nutrients mixed in. Read more

By , 1 month ago
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Designing With Water: Slowing, Spreading, and Sinking Rain on Your Land

Water is the lifeblood of any farm, and how you manage it determines whether your land flourishes or struggles. In permaculture, one of the guiding mantras is to slow water, spread it, and sink it into the ground. Instead of letting rain rush off the surface, carrying away precious topsoil, Read more

By , 2 months ago
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The Quiet Power of Cover Crops in a Resilient Farming System

Bare soil is a missed opportunity and a slow disaster. Every patch of exposed ground is vulnerable to erosion, nutrient loss, and the relentless growth of unwanted weeds. Cover crops, sometimes called green manures, offer one of the most elegant solutions in sustainable agriculture. These are plants grown not for Read more

By , 3 months ago
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Food Forests: Growing an Edible Ecosystem That Cares for Itself

Imagine walking through a garden that feels like a forest, where fruit hangs overhead, berries line the paths, herbs carpet the ground, and the whole system hums with life and largely takes care of itself. This is a food forest, one of the most ambitious and rewarding designs in permaculture. Read more

By , 4 months ago
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Welcoming Beneficial Insects: Natural Pest Control That Actually Works

When most people think about insects in the garden, they think about pests eating their crops. But the vast majority of insects are either harmless or actively helpful, and a thriving population of beneficial insects is one of the most effective forms of pest control available to any grower. Rather Read more

By , 5 months ago
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Composting Mastery: Turning Waste Into the Richest Resource on Your Farm

Compost is often called black gold, and for good reason. This dark, crumbly, sweet-smelling material is one of the most valuable resources any grower can produce, and the best part is that it is made entirely from waste. Kitchen scraps, garden trimmings, fallen leaves, and animal manure that might otherwise Read more

By , 7 months ago
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Keeping Backyard Chickens as Partners in a Productive Homestead

Chickens are among the most rewarding animals a small farmer or homesteader can keep, offering far more than just eggs. When integrated thoughtfully into a permaculture system, a flock of chickens becomes a working partner that turns waste into food, controls pests, fertilizes the soil, and prepares ground for planting. Read more

By , 8 months ago
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Planting by the Seasons: How Succession and Rotation Keep Land Productive

One of the greatest differences between a struggling garden and a thriving one is timing. Knowing what to plant, when to plant it, and what to plant next is a skill that turns a single patch of ground into a continuous source of food throughout the year. Two interlocking practices Read more

By , 10 months ago
Recent Posts
  • Building Healthy Soil From the Ground Up: A Practical Guide to Living Earth
  • Designing With Water: Slowing, Spreading, and Sinking Rain on Your Land
  • The Quiet Power of Cover Crops in a Resilient Farming System
  • Food Forests: Growing an Edible Ecosystem That Cares for Itself
  • Welcoming Beneficial Insects: Natural Pest Control That Actually Works
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