Human scale habitat

Australian wine country needs a lot of oil and coal to stay in business.
Australian wine country needs a lot of oil and coal to stay in business.
By Steven Saint Thomas

Everyone in Australia’s Hunter Valley seems to make a living in one of two ways: they’re either running the family vineyard or ranch, or they’re employed by one of the giant coal mining corporations.

The families work the valley while the corporations strip the hills. The two lifestyles clash when the corporations drill for what Aussie’s call “coal seam gas” next to family farms.

There’s a lot of economic pressure for the little guys to sell and leave the valley to the industrial extractors. It’s all a matter of scale, and huge business enterprises get the advantage of economies of scale.

What about human scale? Permaculturists ask themselves some pretty tough questions: Can we really depend on fossil-fuel driven supply chains owned by huge corporations? Is it possible to sustain ourselves with the land and resources we have? Have we bitten off more perpetual-growth paradigm than we can chew?

As economist E.F. Schumacher proposed in 1973, small is beautiful. We need to explore a future that is not unlike the past – a way of life that is sustained by human effort rather than fossil fuel.

Take, for example, one of the largest organic vineyards in Australian wine country. One middle-aged couple with hopes of retiring in the next decade are managing 80 acres of grapes. That’s enough produce to yield more than 100,000 bottles of wine.

They are trying to do all this with one full-time farmhand, a part-time assistant and a handful of young adults traveling the continent through Willing Workers on Organic Farms (WWOOF).

Throw in a hundred head of sheep, a small orchard and two vegetable gardens and you’ve got some burned-out family farmers shopping for a condo on the coast.

They need a lot of fossil fuel, both petroleum for tractors and other vehicles, and electricity from burning some of that coal being mined over the ridge. Irrigating 80 acres takes a fair amount of pumping. Delivering wine to Sydney is expensive.

A permaculturist would ask: is this sustainable? Is 80 acres of mono-crop a wise idea? Could a smaller vineyard produce a decent amount of wine for people around the valley – while the rest of the land is used to cultivate food?

Perhaps a smaller vineyard could be harvested by hand instead of a special tractor. Grass and hay around the farm might be sufficient feedstock for a smaller herd of sheep. Maybe people in the Hunter Valley would have plenty of work creating a self-reliant region, and they wouldn’t need to mine coal for sale to Asia.

Size does matter, but permaculture turns the paradigm upside-down in favor of small solutions. It says the Hunter Valley vineyard needs to be scaled back or perhaps run by a community of people who can all make a living together.

If a tractor is absolutely necessary to aid the harvest, maybe some acreage could be planted with a feedstock for biodiesel.

In the United States, most households have enough expenses to require two breadwinners. Two adults must work full time to earn enough cash for housing, food, water, energy, healthcare, childcare, vehicles, insurance and whatever amount of stuff we choose to accumulate (not to mention renting storage units in which to store the stuff). And everything we need and want will come from all around the world through a fossil-fuel driven global economic system.

Dinosaur Economics, I’d say! Why not consider life on a single income? If every American household had only one breadwinner (or two part-time earners), the country would enjoy full employment and lots of people would be free to garden, produce food, make their own clothes, ride bicycles and even entertain each other.

Who knows – one day we might not need corporations because we’re working for each other, whether it’s in rural Australia or suburban America. Why not consider a parallel economy where you or someone in your local area produce the things you eat, drink, wear and use in everyday life? Because the truth is, we need each other now, and in the future.

Permaculture, the next generation

Chooks demonstrate future survival technique.
Chooks demonstrate future survival technique.
Spending time with Australian permies has brought to light an old  – and new – dilemma. After 20-30 years of building an off-the-grid homestead, what does one do to make sure all the hard work continues when it’s time to slow down?

Some of our new friends here started their permaculture lifestyle when they were in their early 30s. Now, in their 50s and 60s, they are trying to find an answer.

If you happen to be lucky like our friend, John, one of your children embraces the lifestyle and is poised to seamlessly continue the work. John’s 12-acre property will most likely be managed by one of his sons, who tailored his studies at university to fully prepare for working the land.

But what if you aren’t so lucky? What if your kids have no interest in living on the land?

Permies tell us you fall back on the community. Community building is central to the permaculture lifestyle because we need each other in order for it to work. Like the old-fashioned barn raising,  local community members come to your aid. When you need something, they help you. When they need something, you help them.

John even spent most of the past decade helping launch an intentional-community housing development in town. The homeowners and renters have all bought into permaculture lifestyle and reciprocity ethics.

Not everyone is finding this kind of solution.

Maureen is thinking about a business deal. She may sub-divide her 2-1/4-acre property and sell part of it to raise some Golden Years cash. Roger is talking about renting out his hand-built mudbrick house to anyone who is willing to take on the bulk of the farm work – and build himself a smaller place elsewhere on the property.

But what if none of that happens? What if – perish the thought – your heirs sell the land to anyone who wants it? What if your precious work is turned into a multi-family housing complex?

The answer may surprise you.

You can’t force others to embrace it. You can only set up an infrastructure to follow.  Do the right thing  – for you, for the land and for the planet.

And when the time comes, go in peace.