Reversing desertification in Arizona, Botswana and Australia.
Global Gardener: In The Tropics
- Description
- Reviews
- Citation
- Cataloging
- Transcript
If you are not affiliated with a college or university, and are interested in watching this film, please register as an individual and login to rent this film. Already registered? Login to rent this film.
BILL MOLLISON is a practical visionary. For three decades he has traveled the globe spreading the word about permaculture, the method of sustainable agriculture that he devised. Permaculture weaves together microclimate, annual and perennial plants, animals, soils, water management and human needs into intricately connected productive communities. Mollison has proved that even in the most difficult conditions permaculture empowers people to turn wastelands into food forests.
'(Permaculture) involves caring for the whole system of earth and spaces, devising model systems with much design drawn from nature, with the end result being a system that's ecologically sound and economically profitable...Mollison provides practical and motivating information for just about anyone interested in gardening, sustainable lifestyles, and similar topics...Recommended.' Rachel Lohafer, Instructional Technology Center Media Library, Iowa State University, MC Journal
'A lively and informative two hour video that will be greatly appreciated by gardeners, farmers, horticulturists, and agriculturists.' Midwest Book Review
'Highly recommended.' Video Rating Guide for Libraries
Citation
Main credits
Gailey, Tony (Producer)
Russell, Julian (Producer)
Mollison, B. C (Narrator)
Other credits
Editor, Simon Dibbs; music, Andrew Garton and Nick Jeanes.
Distributor subjects
Agriculture; Anthropology; Architecture; Biology; Environment; Food And Nutrition; Gardening; Geography; Humanities; Land Use; Regional Planning; Sociology; Sustainable AgricultureKeywords
WEBVTT
00:00:15.000 --> 00:00:23.000
[music]
00:00:25.000 --> 00:00:29.999
Permaculture really starts with an ethic.
00:00:30.000 --> 00:00:34.999
Earth care, that’s care of the whole
systems of earth and species.
00:00:35.000 --> 00:00:39.999
So, we actually devise model systems.
00:00:40.000 --> 00:00:44.999
Much of the design is drawn from nature.
00:00:45.000 --> 00:00:49.999
The end result that we aim for is to
produce a system that’s ecologically sound
00:00:50.000 --> 00:00:54.999
and economically profitable. It can get as
sophisticated or as simple as you like.
00:00:55.000 --> 00:01:00.000
[sil.]
00:01:05.000 --> 00:01:09.999
Hi, I’m Bill Mollison.
00:01:10.000 --> 00:01:14.999
I sometimes get very sick of bad news. And I
think we should always look at things like
00:01:15.000 --> 00:01:19.999
that and try to turn it into good news.
00:01:20.000 --> 00:01:24.999
It’s really easy to turn things around.
In five weeks time
00:01:25.000 --> 00:01:29.999
this will be a nice set of potatoes.
00:01:30.000 --> 00:01:34.999
And for me, that’s good news.
00:01:35.000 --> 00:01:39.999
In the late 60s, I was protesting social
00:01:40.000 --> 00:01:44.999
and environmental issues. But by the early
70s, I decided protests wasn’t good enough.
00:01:45.000 --> 00:01:49.999
So, I commenced designing
gardens and positive
00:01:50.000 --> 00:01:54.999
design systems for human settlements.
00:01:55.000 --> 00:01:59.999
[music]
00:02:00.000 --> 00:02:04.999
If people would only realize that everything
they ever needed is right outside their door.
00:02:05.000 --> 00:02:09.999
What you really need is sun,
plants and keep your eye on the
00:02:10.000 --> 00:02:14.999
soil, and of course, we get plenty of
fruits, you’ve got a lot of fruits.
00:02:15.000 --> 00:02:19.999
[music]
00:02:20.000 --> 00:02:24.999
This is my garden in the subtropics. From here to
the Equator, all the fertility is held in plants,
00:02:25.000 --> 00:02:29.999
not in the soil. Therefore, you have to
make an extremely dense plant system.
00:02:30.000 --> 00:02:34.999
And the mulch and fertilizer we put on, is all
up in these plants. If we remove the plants,
00:02:35.000 --> 00:02:39.999
we have an infertile situation.
00:02:40.000 --> 00:02:44.999
In the tropics, plow agriculture is
totally inappropriate for cropping.
00:02:45.000 --> 00:02:49.999
For a few years, we can hold the
nutrient perhaps, but then it will go
00:02:50.000 --> 00:02:54.999
because of the (inaudible) and hot rains.
Even the silica leaves the soil.
00:02:55.000 --> 00:02:59.999
This causes more pollution in streams, more rapid
loses of nutrient, and would be a very rare crop
00:03:00.000 --> 00:03:04.999
that we can grow, which we get the valve
of the minerals lost back in the crop.
00:03:05.000 --> 00:03:09.999
If we produce a system
which doesn’t destroy
00:03:10.000 --> 00:03:14.999
basic resources like soil and
produces negligible pollution,
00:03:15.000 --> 00:03:19.999
then you have something that can go
on forever in which people can live
00:03:20.000 --> 00:03:24.999
for an indefinite period
without destroying the earth.
00:03:25.000 --> 00:03:29.999
And that is the ultimate aim and all… all
our sustainable systems achieve that aim.
00:03:30.000 --> 00:03:34.999
In 1972, there was no
word in English language
00:03:35.000 --> 00:03:40.000
for sustainable agricultural systems, so I coined the
word Permaculture from permanent and agriculture.
00:03:45.000 --> 00:03:49.999
[music]
00:03:50.000 --> 00:03:54.999
And this is where the designer turns into
a recliner. You can rest in your garden.
00:03:55.000 --> 00:03:59.999
If you have it already well planted, you
can pretend to be working in the garden
00:04:00.000 --> 00:04:04.999
and be invisible from the house. Now, only two
years later, I haven’t invisible from the house,
00:04:05.000 --> 00:04:09.999
and before where there were biting ants by
the thousands, there are now only worms.
00:04:10.000 --> 00:04:14.999
And, in fact, I can recline here
and be totally invisible from even
00:04:15.000 --> 00:04:19.999
10 feet away. When you build
a Permaculture garden,
00:04:20.000 --> 00:04:24.999
the nature doesn’t contain such a garden.
00:04:25.000 --> 00:04:29.999
This is incredibly… This situation here, well,
that has a configuration like of forest,
00:04:30.000 --> 00:04:34.999
is yet incredibly rich
in functional plants.
00:04:35.000 --> 00:04:39.999
Plants that have a good relationship to each
other, it’s also incredibly rich in yield,
00:04:40.000 --> 00:04:44.999
much higher than other any agricultural,
00:04:45.000 --> 00:04:49.999
monocultural situation or nature itself.
00:04:50.000 --> 00:04:54.999
So, I specifically built to serve the
needs of human households and community.
00:04:55.000 --> 00:04:59.999
[sil.]
00:05:00.000 --> 00:05:04.999
With most of the garden
perennial are self-seeding,
00:05:05.000 --> 00:05:09.999
your work in planting is almost
finished after you’re sowing,
00:05:10.000 --> 00:05:14.999
basically your foliage, it becomes foliage.
There’s already a
00:05:15.000 --> 00:05:19.999
wide variety of food, because a tremendous
amount of tropical food is root crops,
00:05:20.000 --> 00:05:24.999
the storage.
00:05:25.000 --> 00:05:29.999
Still at most times of year
there’s something good to eat.
00:05:30.000 --> 00:05:34.999
These gardens that we build in the tropics
are very much the disorder of nature.
00:05:35.000 --> 00:05:39.999
This year, I’ve been traveling. I don’t
have a lot of (inaudible) garden.
00:05:40.000 --> 00:05:44.999
Okra.
00:05:45.000 --> 00:05:49.999
There’s capsicum, there’s basil,
00:05:50.000 --> 00:05:54.999
or basil.
00:05:55.000 --> 00:05:59.999
And you have a fairly good base
for salads and… and main foods.
00:06:00.000 --> 00:06:04.999
There’s probably about another 30 varieties
that we could pick. I think there’re 412
00:06:05.000 --> 00:06:09.999
food plants just in this area here.
00:06:10.000 --> 00:06:14.999
If I look around, there’s all fields
and food that I could ever need,
00:06:15.000 --> 00:06:19.999
fibers, mulch to do the
garden, to extend the garden.
00:06:20.000 --> 00:06:24.999
All are here. It took me 30 working
days, over three years to achieve this.
00:06:25.000 --> 00:06:29.999
Once you setup your own home, so you
could leave it for two or three months
00:06:30.000 --> 00:06:34.999
and it just gets better, so
that you’re free to travel,
00:06:35.000 --> 00:06:39.999
then you can go and teach other people.
And that’s why we go to places like
00:06:40.000 --> 00:06:44.999
India and Africa, because a casual
tourist look at those places will show
00:06:45.000 --> 00:06:49.999
that the houses they are, are not
surrounded by all their needs.
00:06:50.000 --> 00:06:55.000
They’re surrounded by crop lands and
they’re surrounded by wastelands.
00:07:05.000 --> 00:07:09.999
Our first course in Southern
Africa was given in 1987.
00:07:10.000 --> 00:07:14.999
And two students came home and setup a
magnificent training center in Zimbabwe,
00:07:15.000 --> 00:07:19.999
the Fambidzanai Center, which contains
most of the examples that Africa needs.
00:07:20.000 --> 00:07:25.000
Who is this one, now?
00:07:30.000 --> 00:07:34.999
Like, you have a culture you’re working with. You have a
culture of method of work and a culture of method of learning.
00:07:35.000 --> 00:07:39.999
In Africa, everyone sings. They sing
the work, they sing the learning.
00:07:40.000 --> 00:07:44.999
They sing the story from village to
village. And to me, the set of people
00:07:45.000 --> 00:07:50.000
singing while they work is… is Africa.
We won’t find that in Europe.
00:08:10.000 --> 00:08:14.999
Many Zimbabweans are poor farmers.
00:08:15.000 --> 00:08:19.999
So everything new we introduce, has
to be able to be made on the farm.
00:08:20.000 --> 00:08:24.999
[sil.]
00:08:25.000 --> 00:08:29.999
Well, this is heap one really quickly does
it. What are we doing? What are you doing?
00:08:30.000 --> 00:08:34.999
Yeah, I’m… I’m just making these
holes here up to the ground so that
00:08:35.000 --> 00:08:39.999
when the air, because on the bottom we put
some branches so that air can circulate…
00:08:40.000 --> 00:08:44.999
Through the heap. Through the heap.
00:08:45.000 --> 00:08:49.999
Yeah, when it’s heats up. You chaps work fast when
you’re singing. Yes, yes. And it seem no time at all.
00:08:50.000 --> 00:08:54.999
Yeah, sure. Very good. Okay. Great. Yeah, yeah. We will enjoy
it, when we’re singing and making the composite at same time.
00:08:55.000 --> 00:08:59.999
Yeah, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So,
this is like concrete.
00:09:00.000 --> 00:09:04.999
Yeah. So, it’s like concrete. And you lived
in this house? Yeah. I find the students here
00:09:05.000 --> 00:09:09.999
are excellent and will
make very good teachers.
00:09:10.000 --> 00:09:14.999
(inaudible) who was with me
is one of those teachers.
00:09:15.000 --> 00:09:19.999
He is very fluent. And I find he knows at least
as much as I do about this sort of system.
00:09:20.000 --> 00:09:24.999
This (inaudible) where
00:09:25.000 --> 00:09:29.999
everything work together. And this winged
bean release nitrogen in the soil.
00:09:30.000 --> 00:09:34.999
And the bananadilla collects nutrients,
00:09:35.000 --> 00:09:39.999
nitrogen from the soil released by… by
00:09:40.000 --> 00:09:44.999
winged bean. Then we plant popo
so that it can be a stick for
00:09:45.000 --> 00:09:49.999
these creepers. And we are
also trying to maintain
00:09:50.000 --> 00:09:54.999
a house for frogs, lizards
underneath, so that they can pick
00:09:55.000 --> 00:09:59.999
the pests which come and eat some of
the flowers in the… the vegetable
00:10:00.000 --> 00:10:04.999
we have around. Everything in this system
00:10:05.000 --> 00:10:09.999
or everything in the ecosystem do
help one another in another way
00:10:10.000 --> 00:10:14.999
or in another round. Yes, I’d like
to say that this particular guild,
00:10:15.000 --> 00:10:19.999
I’ve never seen. And the
Permaculture is about… not about
00:10:20.000 --> 00:10:24.999
which species firmly, but
that you have a legume.
00:10:25.000 --> 00:10:29.999
A planted use as a legume. I plant that repels
pests. So, we will see hundreds of different guilds
00:10:30.000 --> 00:10:34.999
made by students. And they will find out
which ones are very successful for them.
00:10:35.000 --> 00:10:39.999
And then that can become more of a standard
and they can teach that one as a success.
00:10:40.000 --> 00:10:44.999
And when we’re trying to do is make a lot of mistakes,
because that tells us which ones are good ones to use.
00:10:45.000 --> 00:10:49.999
So, you can never have a
typical Permaculture.
00:10:50.000 --> 00:10:54.999
Everyone you visit will be very different. So what we’re
teaching is not how to do it, but how to think about doing it.
00:10:55.000 --> 00:10:59.999
[sil.]
00:11:00.000 --> 00:11:04.999
The center has to be appropriate
to small farmers everywhere.
00:11:05.000 --> 00:11:09.999
One of the good ideas which are
efficient is made of local materials
00:11:10.000 --> 00:11:14.999
and can be made by people who are not real
craftsmen. An extremely cheap beehive.
00:11:15.000 --> 00:11:19.999
This is a (inaudible) beehive.
00:11:20.000 --> 00:11:24.999
These are widely used in Africa anyways,
very easy to handle. Yeah. And… Cheap?
00:11:25.000 --> 00:11:29.999
Cheap to make. Anyone can make them?
Anybody can make them.
00:11:30.000 --> 00:11:34.999
You can see, it’s just an ordinary box.
So your honeycombs don’t stick
00:11:35.000 --> 00:11:39.999
to the sides of the hive. See.
00:11:40.000 --> 00:11:44.999
So when you are combing… When you’re combing, you don’t
have a problem. All you need to do is just lift the
00:11:45.000 --> 00:11:49.999
bark up and you lift it
clean with comb, with that
00:11:50.000 --> 00:11:54.999
shape of the box there. This is the starter
for the…? Yeah, this is to start them off.
00:11:55.000 --> 00:11:59.999
You see, it’s a bit of wax, which we use.
We have a good comber here, who’s expert.
00:12:00.000 --> 00:12:04.999
So it’s quite simple
indeed to… to work with.
00:12:05.000 --> 00:12:09.999
But these are African bees, these are killer bees.
No! African bees are very lovely to work with.
00:12:10.000 --> 00:12:14.999
We are… We are not dead, we are working
with the bees, Bill. Yeah. In America…
00:12:15.000 --> 00:12:19.999
In America, we’d tell these are killer bees.
They’ll kill everything that stop them.
00:12:20.000 --> 00:12:24.999
One of the very exciting things
00:12:25.000 --> 00:12:29.999
that has happened in Zimbabwe is
that students from Fambidzanai
00:12:30.000 --> 00:12:34.999
were invited to a local school
to teach Permaculture design.
00:12:35.000 --> 00:12:39.999
The children at Saint Vincent’s come from the farms and
villages of this district, many of their parents are farmers.
00:12:40.000 --> 00:12:44.999
[sil.]
00:12:45.000 --> 00:12:49.999
That was January. Yeah. You can see the whole
thing improved since… They and the teachers
00:12:50.000 --> 00:12:54.999
and the headmaster, Meg, who is every
enthusiastic, brought in seedlings and seed
00:12:55.000 --> 00:12:59.999
from their gardens. Really it’s time to go with the
rains. Yeah, right. In the beginning of the rain
00:13:00.000 --> 00:13:04.999
is just nothing. How come did they get learning?
About two minutes, we started here. Yeah.
00:13:05.000 --> 00:13:09.999
And we… we went…
00:13:10.000 --> 00:13:14.999
It’s not just an exercise for the kids,
00:13:15.000 --> 00:13:20.000
in two years the garden will be
producing all their lunches.
00:13:30.000 --> 00:13:34.999
The students worked out their site design and
began by putting in hundreds of meters of
00:13:35.000 --> 00:13:39.999
water harvesting ditches on contour.
00:13:40.000 --> 00:13:44.999
We dug a pit so that most of the water can
collect in there and we put the mulch in there.
00:13:45.000 --> 00:13:49.999
And this tree has worked as to support
the tree which will then grow.
00:13:50.000 --> 00:13:54.999
(inaudible). Did you
design this idea or? Yeah.
00:13:55.000 --> 00:13:59.999
I make the same thing at my home, that’s why
I recognized it. I think you’ll all come
00:14:00.000 --> 00:14:05.000
to the same conclusion. Yeah. To you throw
your old school books and waste paper.
00:14:10.000 --> 00:14:14.999
In Africa, we’ll see most people as fairly
healthy with access to a pretty good education.
00:14:15.000 --> 00:14:19.999
But in densely populated India, we
don’t have that level of resources.
00:14:20.000 --> 00:14:24.999
[sil.]
00:14:25.000 --> 00:14:29.999
The problem with the world may not be what
it appears to be just too many people.
00:14:30.000 --> 00:14:34.999
It may be that all investment goes to further
consumption and expansion of the city without any
00:14:35.000 --> 00:14:39.999
expansion of the resources, trees, forests,
clean water and air that the people need.
00:14:40.000 --> 00:14:44.999
As we stop we’ll hit an absolute shortage
of water, absolute shortage of air quality,
00:14:45.000 --> 00:14:49.999
absolute shortage of soil.
00:14:50.000 --> 00:14:54.999
The cities of India are at breaking point, because
they are being flooded with rural refuges.
00:14:55.000 --> 00:14:59.999
The resources could have been directed
to strengthening traditional methods
00:15:00.000 --> 00:15:04.999
and the great variety in traditional
crops, which fed everybody in India.
00:15:05.000 --> 00:15:09.999
But instead of that, resources have been
directed to a green revolution type
00:15:10.000 --> 00:15:15.000
of export agriculture, which has actually
taken away from real food for all of India.
00:15:20.000 --> 00:15:28.000
[music]
00:15:30.000 --> 00:15:34.999
We’re in India in the southern Deccan about
two hours by road north of Hyderabad.
00:15:35.000 --> 00:15:39.999
This whole area is covered with flat barren
00:15:40.000 --> 00:15:44.999
rock that’s been eroded over the years.
And it was here,
00:15:45.000 --> 00:15:49.999
that the first Permaculture course in
India. And this place, which is the
00:15:50.000 --> 00:15:54.999
Deccan Development Society’s headquarters is where
we started to spread Permaculture in India.
00:15:55.000 --> 00:15:59.999
And one of my students was Dr. Venkat.
00:16:00.000 --> 00:16:04.999
[sil.]
00:16:05.000 --> 00:16:09.999
Hello Venkat. So, this is the first
banana plant I planted here. Yeah.
00:16:10.000 --> 00:16:14.999
And it was all like hard like this in those
days. I remember the students helping me. We…
00:16:15.000 --> 00:16:19.999
We had to use picked seeds. I’ve always been
amazed at the good branches from this plant.
00:16:20.000 --> 00:16:24.999
How much have we got off it?
00:16:25.000 --> 00:16:29.999
About 80 to 90 bunches. In how many years?
One and a half years.
00:16:30.000 --> 00:16:34.999
That’s pretty good. Pretty good. Yeah.
And we’ve got a lot of bananas of it.
00:16:35.000 --> 00:16:39.999
This was the first banana circle,
I think, on the Deccan. In India.
00:16:40.000 --> 00:16:44.999
In India, yeah. In India, it’s the first
circle. Yeah. It stood up very well. Yeah.
00:16:45.000 --> 00:16:49.999
But what I’d really like to do is have a look at the system you’ve
put in because this is all we did in the first place. That’s right.
00:16:50.000 --> 00:16:54.999
And nothing in here would be older than what?
Two… Two and a half years. Two and a half years.
00:16:55.000 --> 00:16:59.999
Nothing… Nothing that you see here is more than two and
a half years old. And other interesting part about
00:17:00.000 --> 00:17:04.999
what you are seeing in this particular
area is that the foot below this
00:17:05.000 --> 00:17:09.999
is a bedrock of laterite. Towards
the end of December 1987,
00:17:10.000 --> 00:17:14.999
this is our farm looked like
- no trees, not even shrubs,
00:17:15.000 --> 00:17:19.999
not even grass. I remember that a lot.
00:17:20.000 --> 00:17:24.999
I remember using the pix, you know, we couldn’t…
we couldn’t have planted some of them.
00:17:25.000 --> 00:17:29.999
We couldn’t just plant at that time. This
is astounding, you know, the jackfruit.
00:17:30.000 --> 00:17:34.999
Pomegranate here. Pomegranate.
We have… Cherry. Cherry.
00:17:35.000 --> 00:17:39.999
Cherry there, and mango. Mango. God this
place is good with enough food here,
00:17:40.000 --> 00:17:44.999
bananas, coconuts. I never thought
this soil would produce like this.
00:17:45.000 --> 00:17:49.999
Yeah, that’s true. In the summer of 1988,
00:17:50.000 --> 00:17:54.999
in this area, our well was… had gone dry.
00:17:55.000 --> 00:17:59.999
Now… We have now got about
00:18:00.000 --> 00:18:04.999
2,500 to 6,000 trees and shrubs
00:18:05.000 --> 00:18:09.999
any many number of groundcover.
00:18:10.000 --> 00:18:14.999
So that you find here, on this farm,
there is not one square meter of
00:18:15.000 --> 00:18:19.999
barren area. Something or other is growing.
If no useful thing
00:18:20.000 --> 00:18:24.999
is growing, at least something which we
call a weed is going, but it is covered,
00:18:25.000 --> 00:18:29.999
the soil is covered. Now, all this growth
results in harvesting the rainwater.
00:18:30.000 --> 00:18:34.999
Now, where will this rainwater go,
it will definitely go into well.
00:18:35.000 --> 00:18:39.999
So much so this year, the level in our well after the
monsoon is the highest ever recorded in this district.
00:18:40.000 --> 00:18:48.000
[music]
00:18:50.000 --> 00:18:54.999
I think it must be mouse. Yeah.
00:18:55.000 --> 00:18:59.999
Under this the soil is very beautiful, they’re sweet
potatoes. Sweet potato. You have enough (inaudible)
00:19:00.000 --> 00:19:04.999
thousands of them. Just about
a foot with two nodes,
00:19:05.000 --> 00:19:09.999
we use it as a ground cover
and you get a good yield.
00:19:10.000 --> 00:19:14.999
You know, this is a fantastic mulch. Yeah, it is a fantastic
mulch. You can use can use this instead of paper.
00:19:15.000 --> 00:19:19.999
This is… This is your paper. This is our
paper. I use newspapers, you would use these.
00:19:20.000 --> 00:19:24.999
Newspaper in India is not feasible. Not common. Not common
or feasible. Isn’t that good for toilet paper, is it?
00:19:25.000 --> 00:19:29.999
No, no. It has acids pecules in the leaves.
True, true, but we don’t know the effect there.
00:19:30.000 --> 00:19:38.000
[sil.]
00:19:40.000 --> 00:19:44.999
Uh… So, just being making the
deposit on my cup of tea.
00:19:45.000 --> 00:19:49.999
Uh… These toilets flush across to a
dome, which is over a biogester,
00:19:50.000 --> 00:19:54.999
which sends the gas off, which goes to the
kitchen and then we light the gas there
00:19:55.000 --> 00:19:59.999
and we make a cup of tea. So, you if want a cup
of tea here, you have to make a deposit there.
00:20:00.000 --> 00:20:04.999
If you don’t have enough people, you can
put manure down this part and it goes down
00:20:05.000 --> 00:20:09.999
into the septic tank. After it’s digested,
00:20:10.000 --> 00:20:14.999
then the manure slides and comes up here.
00:20:15.000 --> 00:20:19.999
And here it’s full of yeast and bacteria, and
we can sow grass in it and feed it to cattle,
00:20:20.000 --> 00:20:24.999
because it’s got a lot more
protein than it had originally.
00:20:25.000 --> 00:20:29.999
And additionally we can mix it one to ten
with water and put it on the garden,
00:20:30.000 --> 00:20:34.999
because there is no fertilizer
lost in the digestion process.
00:20:35.000 --> 00:20:43.000
[music]
00:20:45.000 --> 00:20:49.999
The Deccan Development Group have been
a tremendous catalyst for change.
00:20:50.000 --> 00:20:54.999
They’d setup women sangams or
councils in every village.
00:20:55.000 --> 00:20:59.999
So from Venkat’s garden in Pastapur the ideas are
spreading throughout India with his students.
00:21:00.000 --> 00:21:04.999
[music]
00:21:05.000 --> 00:21:09.999
He alone is working with 120 villages in the
Deccan and the students in total would be working
00:21:10.000 --> 00:21:14.999
in more than a thousand villages. They’ve
had a tremendous affect of one were to
00:21:15.000 --> 00:21:19.999
health of the people and their… their spirit,
the way they feel about their lives.
00:21:20.000 --> 00:21:24.999
[music]
00:21:25.000 --> 00:21:29.999
Until the green revolution just a few years ago, all the
plants in his garden would have been growing in the field,
00:21:30.000 --> 00:21:34.999
but then the fields have become monocultural,
their landlords are putting in single crops.
00:21:35.000 --> 00:21:39.999
There is no food mainly in the fields for people
here, so these gardens are really necessary.
00:21:40.000 --> 00:21:44.999
[music]
00:21:45.000 --> 00:21:49.999
I first went to the Deccan about three years ago when the drought was
severe. People were selling or giving away their plough animals.
00:21:50.000 --> 00:21:54.999
Everybody was listless and
sitting in the shade,
00:21:55.000 --> 00:21:59.999
just trying to survive
until the rains came. So
00:22:00.000 --> 00:22:04.999
we had a great sense of urgency. We know that most
of the emphasis has been on the green revolution
00:22:05.000 --> 00:22:09.999
of annual crops and it just
won’t feed people in drought.
00:22:10.000 --> 00:22:14.999
They go in for cash crops
like sugarcane, cotton,
00:22:15.000 --> 00:22:19.999
then rubber, then tea, at the
expense of their own food.
00:22:20.000 --> 00:22:24.999
That is food has become a commodity now.
00:22:25.000 --> 00:22:29.999
And if we want to build a
sustainable system of food,
00:22:30.000 --> 00:22:34.999
we have got to reverse this trend, that
is take food out of the commodity market,
00:22:35.000 --> 00:22:39.999
make it a non-commodity. Not
for export and not for market,
00:22:40.000 --> 00:22:44.999
but primarily for consumption.
00:22:45.000 --> 00:22:49.999
One of the things which we’ve got to go against the
present agricultural system is the economic stranglehold,
00:22:50.000 --> 00:22:54.999
you see that the landlords have put on the poorer
sections of the people and of the country.
00:22:55.000 --> 00:23:03.000
[non-English narration]
00:23:05.000 --> 00:23:09.999
He had to get the seed for the potatoes,
00:23:10.000 --> 00:23:14.999
he had to purchase in the
market the seed for sugarcane,
00:23:15.000 --> 00:23:19.999
and he had to buy the fertilizers.
00:23:20.000 --> 00:23:24.999
And after all these inputs, he had
borrowed a loan of 4,000 rupees
00:23:25.000 --> 00:23:29.999
from a group in the village, but the group charged four
rupees per month per cent, that is it works out to
00:23:30.000 --> 00:23:34.999
48% per year. So after paying
back all these things,
00:23:35.000 --> 00:23:39.999
he was not left with anything whatsoever.
00:23:40.000 --> 00:23:44.999
He has got a 10-year-old boy,
who was sold to a landlord
00:23:45.000 --> 00:23:49.999
as a bonded laborer for
a loan of 1,400 rupees,
00:23:50.000 --> 00:23:54.999
that’s all, that is his life,
his life as cheap as that.
00:23:55.000 --> 00:23:59.999
So, we also paid back that
1,400 rupees to the father,
00:24:00.000 --> 00:24:04.999
who paid it back to the landlord and
the boy has started working here.
00:24:05.000 --> 00:24:09.999
He is excellent, very intelligent, sharp.
And possibly,
00:24:10.000 --> 00:24:14.999
he is going to be the first Permaculturist
00:24:15.000 --> 00:24:19.999
of this village in his own language.
00:24:20.000 --> 00:24:24.999
He will be able to practically
lay designs for farms.
00:24:25.000 --> 00:24:29.999
We are confident about that. And
coming from people like him,
00:24:30.000 --> 00:24:34.999
it will be much more effective rather
than coming from people like me.
00:24:35.000 --> 00:24:43.000
[non-English narration]
00:24:45.000 --> 00:24:49.999
He says, he had a talk with his parents, and they say
that they will have to continue to see the present
00:24:50.000 --> 00:24:54.999
question of sugarcane and other cultivation
which they are doing for their livelihood.
00:24:55.000 --> 00:24:59.999
But then they have absolutely no objection for
trees to be incorporated on their farmland.
00:25:00.000 --> 00:25:04.999
And he has said, you see that we will plant the trees in
such a design that it will not interfere with your tilling,
00:25:05.000 --> 00:25:09.999
with your plowing and with
your harvesting activities.
00:25:10.000 --> 00:25:14.999
He says, that is only in the initial stages there
is excess work, you see, because most of the things
00:25:15.000 --> 00:25:19.999
were going is for trees. So in the beginning there
will be extra work. And also he puts the question,
00:25:20.000 --> 00:25:24.999
without working how can we live?
00:25:25.000 --> 00:25:29.999
In the first year, the village just ignored me and they just didn’t
know that there was something going on here, there were not a thing.
00:25:30.000 --> 00:25:34.999
But this year, for example, quite a good
number of marginal farmers have been visiting
00:25:35.000 --> 00:25:39.999
on their own, on their own.
And first they just go around
00:25:40.000 --> 00:25:44.999
the entire farm and see what are all the things
that are growing, then they come back and tell us,
00:25:45.000 --> 00:25:49.999
”Well, there seems to be
something worthwhile doing it.”
00:25:50.000 --> 00:25:54.999
Then they say, “We are faced with the
problem that our livelihood depends
00:25:55.000 --> 00:25:59.999
upon our present method of food
production.” Then we tell them that,
00:26:00.000 --> 00:26:04.999
”Look, you don’t have to stop
totally what you are doing now,
00:26:05.000 --> 00:26:09.999
but to starting at say 10% of your land, you
get into Permaculture principles and design,
00:26:10.000 --> 00:26:14.999
functional design, then add on
every year about 10% or 15%.
00:26:15.000 --> 00:26:19.999
And in the course of about five or seven years,
you will have passed through the transition
00:26:20.000 --> 00:26:24.999
from an unsustainable system to a sustainable system,
which will definitely keep you above all and
00:26:25.000 --> 00:26:29.999
you will not have to starve.”
00:26:30.000 --> 00:26:34.999
[music]
00:26:35.000 --> 00:26:39.999
This is edible. And then the seeds are
boiled and eaten if you got any chest pain.
00:26:40.000 --> 00:26:44.999
Yeah, that’s nice. It’s magnificent,
00:26:45.000 --> 00:26:49.999
lot of weeds hanging. They’re
everywhere when you look up.
00:26:50.000 --> 00:26:54.999
Yeah. You will be have to eat them
on your own. How much you’ll eat?
00:26:55.000 --> 00:26:59.999
You find that there’s a clear potential
00:27:00.000 --> 00:27:04.999
that we don’t have to starve for food. Okay, most
probably. Absolutely, we don’t have to starve.
00:27:05.000 --> 00:27:09.999
[music]
00:27:10.000 --> 00:27:14.999
So here we leave Venkat in his Garden
of Eden in the tropics. We know,
00:27:15.000 --> 00:27:19.999
he can turn any wastelands back into food
forests. But next week we will look at deserts,
00:27:20.000 --> 00:27:24.999
and that’s a much tougher proposition.
00:27:25.000 --> 00:27:30.000
[music]
Distributor: Bullfrog Films
Length: 29 minutes
Date: 1996
Genre: Expository
Language: English
Grade: 7-12, College, Adult
Color/BW:
Closed Captioning: Available
Existing customers, please log in to view this film.
New to Docuseek? Register to request a quote.
Related Films
Looks at the climates of Europe, Tasmania, and the San Juan Islands in…
A model of community supported agriculture in the midst of suburban sprawl.