I've just ordered a book about #permaculture. While I knew about it for quiet some time already, I just rediscovered it. I thought it was already mainstreamy-er than it apparently is. Please look up some random ass YouTube video about the topic and watch it. That stuff is great and it should be taught in primary schools.

There are 3 core concepts which are applicable in every branch of life:

- care for earth
- care for the people
- fair share (of surpluses)

For all the tech savvy folks who are reading this: There is also #permacomputing

c.f. https://permacomputing.net/

Have a nice one and take care!
permacomputing

Furthermore, here are the extended 12 principles of #permaculture (copied from Wikipedia but worth sharing):

- Observe and interact: Take time to engage with nature to design solutions that suit a particular situation.
- Catch and store energy: Develop systems that collect resources at peak abundance for use in times of need.
- Obtain a yield: Emphasize projects that generate meaningful rewards.
- Apply self-regulation and accept feedback: Discourage inappropriate activity to ensure that systems function well.
- Use and value renewable resources and services: Make the best use of nature's abundance: reduce consumption and dependence on non-renewable resources.
- Produce no waste: Value and employ all available resources: waste nothing.
- Design from patterns to details: Observe patterns in nature and society and use them to inform designs, later adding details.
- Integrate rather than segregate: Proper designs allow relationships to develop between design elements, allowing them to work together to support each other.
- Use small and slow solutions: Small and slow systems are easier to maintain, make better use of local resources, and produce more sustainable outcomes.
- Use and value diversity: Diversity reduces system-level vulnerability to threats and fully exploits its environment.
- Use edges and value the marginal: The border between things is where the most interesting events take place. These are often the system's most valuable, diverse, and productive elements.
- Creatively use and respond to change: A positive impact on inevitable change comes from careful observation, followed by well-timed intervention.