Regenerative Agriculture Resources for New Zealanders
There is an overwhelming abundance of information online about permaculture, but relatively little of it is directly connected to New Zealand. This page is an effort to put together a simple resource to answer the most common questions and to help New Zealanders get started on their permaculture adventure.
The strength (and weakness) of permaculture is that it is many things to many people. Ask any two people “what is permaculture?”s and I can almost guarantee that you'll get two different answers. At its heart permaculture is design language based on an evolving set of ethics and principles which help us work in harmony with the natural systems of our world.
My favourite way to think of permaculture goes like this: if being indigenous means to be “of a place”, then permaculture is a framework which helps those of us who are no longer indigenous begin to relearn what it means to be “of a place”.
You might also be interested in: syntropy or Getting Started with Permaculture in New Zealand.
If you have found any resources which would be helpful for people trying to learn about permaculture, please send them to me and I'll add them below.
Official
Permaculture in New Zealand - PiNZ is the primary permaculture organisation in New Zealand. They organise the yearly hui, certify designers and manage a website which lists events
PiNZ on Facebook - A very active community, lots of chat and some technical permaculture discussion.
Teachers
Designers
Books
It seems like every day another “permaculture” book is released. If you want the big list, here's my collection of permaculture-ish books I've read or would like to read.
Books I've read and recommend for beginners:
An Earth Users Guide to Permaculture - An Australian based book which walks you through the process of designing a property step by step. You can read through the entire book in an afternoon, though it will take longer if you do the exercises as intended.
At Home with Holistic Management - Holistic Management is the decision making framework that permaculture forgot to include. Originally designed to help farmers improve pastureland, it is this book focuses on how it can be used to help organise a family or run a small business.
Easy, inspiring reads:
Miraculous Abundance - Wonderful story of a French couple starting a permaculture farm. Easy and fun read but also lots of great ideas and practical thoughts on what it takes to make a commercial permaculture farm work.
Paradise Lot - An inspiring story of two American friends creating a permaculture paradise on a tenth of an acre.
Books I haven't read, but others often recommend for beginners:
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Gaia's Garden - Focuses primarily on teaching permaculture patterns and techniques using the garden as an example.
Permaculture: A Designers Manual - The canonical reference manual with more ideas than will ever fit in your brain. Totally worth browsing but get it from the library, it's expensive and dated.
Podcasts
There are only a few permaculture podcasts by New Zealanders:
There is a growing collection of interviews with NZ practitioners on overseas podcasts:
If you are interested I also have a larger collection of interesting permaculture and farming related podcasts.
Abundant Edge
Acres USA - Tractor Time
AgroInnovations - The earliest permaculture podcast that I know of. Defunct since 2015 but plenty good in the archives.
Cultivariable
Down to Earth: The Planet to Plate Podcast
Earth Repair Radio
Farmer to Farmer (sadly finished but the archives are worth a listen)
Goodlife Revival
Homesteading and Permaculture with Paul Wheaton
Investing in Regenerative Agriculture
The Permaculture Podcast
Permaculture Realised Podcast
Permaculture Voices
The Plant Report
Regenerative Agriculture
The Ruminant
Sustainable World Radio
Videos
My big permaculture playlist is here. I haven't been particularly selective, just anything which I learned something from.
New Zealand based videos …
Happen Films - A wonderful collection of New Zealand based permaculture documentaries.
Not NZ based, but worth watching!
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Woodlanders - My favourite permaculture “series”. Short episodes from around the world demonstrating surviving “forest culture”.
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