A Fukuoka Inspired Permaculture Garden

Emilia Hazelip (1938 - February 1, 2003) was an organic Permaculture gardener who was born in Spain and began gardening seriously in the late ’60s. A former Merry Prankster and pioneer of the concept of synergistic gardening, her farming methods were inspired by the work of Masanobu Fukuoka.

Where Fukuoka focused most of his attention on orchards and the rice/barley crop rotation, Emilia Hazelip focused on creating and maintaining market gardens of vegetables and herbs.

Emilia Hazelip, who introduced the concept of permaculture to France over a decade ago, drew on many sources as she continued to develop gardens. The work of Permaculturist Marc Bonfils with self-fertile cereal production and the microbiological research of Alan Smith and Elaine Ingham are frequently mentioned.

For More Information about Emilia Hazelip Please Visit:

http://fukuokafarmingol.info/femilia.html

For More Information on the Global Permaculture Movement Please Visit:

http://www.permacultureplanet.com








3 Responses to 'A Fukuoka Inspired Permaculture Garden'

  1. odin422 - January 21st, 2009 at 1:01 pm

    love this stuff

  2. paulomellett - January 21st, 2009 at 1:01 pm

    and I also put a pond in the middle. Now I have hedgehogs and frogs on slug duty - and it has been so dry here in early June, the mulch has meant I have not needed to water at all. Great!

  3. paulomellett - January 21st, 2009 at 1:01 pm

    Fantastic video. I watched Sepp Holzer’s dvd about his raised beds in Austria - very similar to these - and wondered how he did it. This is a great ‘how to’ guide. I am trying these beds out here in Wales, and am getting great results in the first year. Even the predicted slug problem is not too bad - I have laid the border hedge and left big stacks of habitat piles


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