Earth Skills, Permaculture and Wild Abundance
Publisher |
Scott Mann
Media Type |
audio
Categories Via RSS |
Natural Sciences
Science & Medicine
Publication Date |
Mar 14, 2020
Episode Duration |
Unknown

My guest is Natalie Bogwalker, the visionary behind Wild Abundance, a permaculture skills center and homestead near Asheville, North Carolina. As a primary instructor at Wild Abundance, she teaches a variety of classes, including tiny house building workshops, women’s carpentry, and permaculture design courses. She likes to share her passion with others to help them […]

The post Earth Skills, Permaculture and Wild Abundance appeared first on The Permaculture Podcast.

My guest is Natalie Bogwalker, the visionary behind Wild Abundance, a permaculture skills center and homestead near Asheville, North Carolina. As a primary instructor at Wild Abundance, she teaches a variety of classes, including tiny house building workshops, women’s carpentry, and permaculture design courses. She likes to share her passion with others to help them […] The post Earth Skills, Permaculture and Wild Abundance appeared first on The Permaculture Podcast.
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My guest is Natalie Bogwalker, the visionary behind Wild Abundance, a permaculture skills center and homestead near Asheville, North Carolina. As a primary instructor at Wild Abundance, she teaches a variety of classes, including tiny house building workshops, women’s carpentry, and permaculture design courses. She likes to share her passion with others to help them live in an empowered and Earth-centered way.https://www.thepermaculturepodcast.com/wp-content/uploads/WildAbundance.mp3

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As a founder of Firefly Gathering, one of the most significant primitive skills events in the United States, Natalie brings years of Earth-focused skills and living to each of her classes. This focus forms the center of what she joins me to talk about today, as we discuss including hands-on primitive skills to create a more in-depth, grounded permaculture education. We also touch on how an extended experience, as her Earth-skills Permaculture Design Course takes 27 days spread over nine months, changes the nature of the PDC. We wrap up by talking about what students can bring to their course, and how permaculture instructors can improve Permaculture education.Find out more about Natalie and her classes, including the upcoming Earth Skills class, at WildAbundance.net. You’ll find a link to that, as well as my interview with Eric Toensmeier and Ben Falk, and more, in the show notes.

I’m thankful for what Natalie shared with us about extending and expanding on Permaculture education, both for the amount of time spent in courses, the skills we develop while there, and on mentoring and advanced classes after we start down this road.

Her question, “How many hours did you spend in the fifth grade?” raises a point I’ve considered many times, though based more around college classes. A 72 hours PDC is about the equivalent of 6 college credits. So you can think of the Permaculture Design Course, as an introductory course, as about the same as Biology 101 and 102. It’s a great place to start, but there’s so much more to do. 

Extended courses, such as Natalie’s and others, add to the time between teachers and students. This extra time allows us to add to our hard and soft skills, from fire starting and shelter building to carpentry, nutritional knowledge, and social justice. With a student-focused approach, this can include not only the core knowledge necessary to complete a PDC, but also create the shared lexicon required to discuss design, ethics, and principles, and apply these ideas to more than the landscape. Through these, and advanced classes that focus on specific subjects such as water catchment, home building, foraging, conflict transformation, and personal change, we can gain the skills necessary for the creation of the permanent culture inherent in the work of permaculture. If you’re still looking to find your area of focus, your calling, whatever your stage in life, teachers like Natalie, myself, and others, are here to help you find the way. If you’d like to learn more, get in touch with the folks at Wild Abundance, at WildAbundance.net, and, of course, you can write to me:Email: show@thepermaculturepodcast.comWrite:The Permaculture PodcastP.O. Box 16Dauphin, PA 17018Oh, and how long do we spend in the fifth grade? Over 1,000 hours in the United States.

Until the next time, eat something wild every day while taking care of Earth, your self, and each other.Related InterviewsDrawing Down Carbon: Eric Toensmeier on Agroforestry and Climate ChangeFinancial Permaculture with Eric ToensmeierEric Toensmeier on Perennials, Broadscale Permaculture, & Food ForestsWhole System Design & the Resilient Farm with Ben FalkResourcesWild AbundanceWild Abundance InstructorsFirefly Gathering(Photo Credit: Jenny Tenney Photography)

The post Earth Skills, Permaculture and Wild Abundance appeared first on The Permaculture Podcast.

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