Published inPERMACULTURE journalIs permaculture appropriated and rehashed indigenous knowledge?It is not a new allegation but it is a persistent one. In mistaking inclusion for appropriation and inspiration for utilisation, it…2d ago2d ago
Published inPacificEdgeTwo tales of the mountainsA brief memoir of bushwalking in Tasmania’s Walls of Jerusalem in the 1970s…3d ago3d ago
Published inPERMACULTURE journalPermaculture in a time of crisis, war and displacementWe stand at a moment of crisis in our world. Wars rage in Eastern Europe and the Middle East, producing huge refugeee flows. An…5d agoA response icon15d agoA response icon1
Published inPERMACULTURE journalAmaranthI’m thinking of tossing it in for the morning. Been out here for twenty minutes, maybe, and it is still flat as a lake.Jul 6Jul 6
Published inPERMACULTURE journalChiaChia is one of the Central and South American food species that we can grow on Australia’s warm to cool temperate climates.Jun 29Jun 29
Published inPacificEdgeThe trackMuch fiction is based on fact. Small things trigger stories, everyday things like walking along a short track below the trees and emerging…Jun 27Jun 27
Published inPacificEdgeThe legacyAdd a dose of fiction to a touch of reality and you have an alternative history. The genre takes something that happened and riffs a…Jun 19Jun 19
Published inPERMACULTURE journalCasuarinaBill Mollison said that every element in a permaculture design works best when it performs more than one function. Look no further than the…Jun 15Jun 15
Published inPacificEdgePilgrimageIn Tasmania, the Turning of the Fagus brings us into the mountains to witness a spectacle of natureJun 10Jun 10
Published inPacificEdgeTrails in the skyLook… up in the sky… it’s a cloud… it’s a trail… no, it’s a chemtrail! How those white trails in the sky became something more sinister…Jun 10Jun 10