Permaculture Principles - Integrate Rather Than Segregate

in #permaculture7 years ago (edited)

One of my favorite principles of Permaculture deals with the innate qualities of elements to a system, and the relative interpretation of whether these qualities are 'good' or 'bad' or whether that really matters at all. But let's start by looking at these peculiar terms: 

Are We Talking About Ecology Here?

Integration has been sort of a trendy word when I was a kid growing up in Germany (it still may be), usually in dealing with immigrants. It was a way Germans could feel good about welcoming foreigners and making them feel accepted, by correcting their grammatical mistakes, or teaching them German cultural norms, such as throwing the green glass in the green container, and the brown glass in the brown one (but not between 12:30 and 2:30 p.m.). Segregation on the other hand brings to mind pre-1960s US, with restrooms and classrooms for whites and non-whites... But what does all this have to do with building and using natural ecosystems? 

A Blessing or a Curse? 

Due to our cultural upbringing we tend to see the world in monochrome: things are either good or bad (for us, that is). The bees and butterflies landing on our flowering fruit trees? They must be good. Although their primary motivation is food, at the same time their pollination work makes a nice harvest possible. But those slugs chewing through your seedlings? They must be bad, leaving a wake of destruction behind, though their effort is motivated by the same hunger. As a result, we are predisposed to wanting to eliminate everything that we consider bad: we exterminate the wolves that might prey on our sheep, we shoot the hawks who might get too close to our chickens, we poison our land with pesticides, herbicides, and fungicides, until nothing is left but our sad, lonely crop plants, dripping with poison. Okay, we had a good reason for going organic, right?

What About Those Slugs, Though?

Instinctively, our immediate reaction was to think of beer-traps, lime-rock barriers, or other nifty, non-poisonous ways of killing them, trapping them, or at least keeping them far from our premises. Was I right? But how about going the other way, and inviting them into our gardens, to become integrated elements in our ecosystem. 

Invite the Slugs? Into My Veggie Patch? How Crazy Do I Look??? 

That's exactly how adherents of Permaculture seem crazy to the rest of the world, especially after explaining that they intend to put those slugs to good work in their gardens. What is it that slugs do? How can they be useful for the garden? Well, for one thing, they provide food for creatures that directly benefit us, such as ducks. Hence the famous Mollison quote:

“You don’t have a snail (or slug) problem, you have a duck deficiency!” 

And this characteristic alone is worth treating the slug as an integral part of the system. Sure, the ducks could survive without them, but what about the slugs? How else would you keep them in check?  Because if they are there, they will be around. And if you have poison-free delicacies growing, it's like an open invitation to a non-stop-buffet. Like it or not, they are already part of a system, so we better make sure they fit into our design equally well. 

Other Ways to Integrate:

Of course, this is just one example of integrating an element into our system. If you don't have predators, invite them in, by building shelters such as piles of rocks for snakes, or bundles of sticks for carpenter wasps. You could also ensure they have a diverse diet, by planting lots of flowers which invite many insects. These in turn will invite their own predators. Though in practice, good hiding places are a lot harder to come by than food, so a good shelter is a great way to integrate. Another approach is planting sacrificial crops, such as eggplants for potato beetles. They will migrate from your potatoes (and the whole surrounding area) to feast on their eggplants. Occasionally, a well chewed-up eggplant full of beetles can be tossed to the chickens, who will love eating both. Of course, each element and each characteristic is unique, requiring a unique solution, making a clever design a bit of a challenge. Spraying poison on the the other hand doesn't require much thinking.

Integrating Characteristics 

This principle of integration can be applied not only to elements, but also their qualities. Let's say somebody wants to take a bath every day. Now, one could go ahead and highlight all the wastefulness of such a practice, but if that individual insists on it, there is no way they can be happy without their daily bath. So how can this preference be integrated into the system? By setting it up in a way that resources (water, energy, gray-water) are not wasted. If there is sufficient rainwater, for example, heated by the sun, and after the bath the warm water passes through a heat-exchange before irrigating plants... sure, let the guy have his daily bath. Why not? 

Social Integration

Since Permaculture is not just about the permanence of agriculture, but culture in general, the same principle should be applied to other less favored elements of the social realm. Who am I talking about? The rednecks down the street, the satanists upstairs, the spammers I keep running into online, people who don't support the president, people who support the president …  you name your favorite group you'd be happier without. What can you do about them? Best advice: treat them like the slugs in your garden. Realize that they are unlikely to change or go away, no matter how hard you try. Think of all their characteristics, their inputs and outputs, and accept them the way they are. Now find a way to connect these qualities to other elements in the system. If you do well, everyone is going to be happier, and previous disagreements will seem ridiculous in retrospect. 

Sources: 1, 2, 3, Pic: 1

To see my discussions of other Permaculture Principles, take a look at these posts:

Permaculture: A Starting Point

David Holmgren

  1. Observe and interact
  2. Catch and store energy
  3. Obtain a yield
  4. Apply self-regulation and accept feedback
  5. Use and value renewable resources and services
  6. Produce no waste
  7. Design from patterns to details
  8. Integrate rather than segregate
  9. Use small and slow solutions
  10. Use and value diversity
  11. Use edges and value the marginal
  12. Creatively use and respond to change

Bill Mollison

  1. Work with nature, not against it
  2. The problem is the solution
  3. Maximum effect for minimum effort
  4. The yield of the system is theoretically unlimited
  5. Everything gardens

Scott Pittman

  1. Cooperation instead of competition
  2. Every function is served by multiple elements
  3. Every element serves multiple functions
  4. Make the most out of energy
  5. Use the edge effect
  6. Everything is connected
  7. The problem is the solution

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This post received a 2.9% upvote from @randowhale thanks to @stortebeker! For more information, click here!

Millison had the best quotes! This is a great explenination of permiculture integration principles. Well done!

Thank you. I want to cover them all... and then some. :-)

That was such a cool post. To be honest I never heard the word Permaculture before. There should be easier ways to achieve integration, and use it to our advantage

Cheers, great content. You have a new follower here!

Awesome @juaca7777! I'm so glad you enjoyed it. Oh, Permaculture... my passion. This is probably a really good post to start with, because it grabs it by its essence: philosophical (or ethical) concepts derived from following natural patterns, primarily intended for sustainable agriculture, but can be applied socially just as well. Take a look at my other posts discussing them!

I really enjoyed this post. Excellent narrative. I've often been perturbed by how humans deal with unwanted animals and pests. Everything affects everything.

Slightly off topic, but your post made me think about it. Often bears are shot simply because one was spotted near a camp. I think it's the WORST THING EVER. first of all if you're going to" camp" maybe actually camp so you aren't attracting bears to your area. Bears don't Just come up trying to kill you for no reason... and they eat more plants Than i think most people realize.

Same thing with snakes. Especially in the south, lots of people are just killing snakes because they "might be poisonous "
Again they're not in your environment they're a part of it. They don't go around biting humans unless provoked

Right, bull snakes actually out-compete rattlers, so killing them is counterproductive. As for the bears... who's invading whose territory anyway? So sad! Reminds me of that meme with the shark and diver: the deadliest creature ever... next to a great white shark. Thanks for the great comment.

So true about the sharks too.

Wonderful post! Thank you so much for the time in putting it together. I love the idea of everything balancing its self out on a farm. A good big picture article.

Thank you, I really appreciate it.

Interesting view point, really a paradigm shift for me: do not try to remove slugs, but add ducks. Makes sense!

Oh, it feels so nice to read your comment! Because THAT is exactly what permaculture is all about: building relationships where each element supports each other. Feel free to check out my other posts on this topic.

Wow what a thought prevoking piece of writing, really enjoye reading that! What you are saying is we need to all find our duck to eat the annoying people in our lives.. I get it now. :) Just joking that really was a great read. Thanks for sharing.

Well, that's nature's lesson for us: If you don't have too much else to offer, you could always become duck food.

Been looking for some easy permaculture intros so thanks for this, will have a read at the other links. Upvoted & followed!