Welcome to Milkwood
Introduction
Habit Zero: Learn whose country you're on
Principle 1 - Observe and interact
Habit 1: Identify five useful wild plant
Habit 2: Research the life cycle of something you use daily
Habit 3: Pay the rent
Habit 4: Regulate your household's temperature
Habit 5: Learn about your local waterways
Principle 2 - Catch and store energy
Habit 6: Store the season by preserving food
Habit 7: Harvest rainwater
Habit 8: Build a mini greenhouse
Habit 9: Create a budget and start saving
Habit 10: Grow a storage crop
Principle 3 - Obtain a yield
Habit 11: Grow sprouts and microgreens
Habit 12: Use what you have
Habit 13: Start a herb garden
Habit 14: Do a life/work time audit
Habit 15: Pest-proof your garden
Principle 4 - Apply self-regulation and accept feedback
Habit 16: Locavore challenge
Habit 17: Rehome all that stuff
Habit 18: Use your privilege for purpose
Habit 19: Learn how to communicate well
Habit 20: Get water wise
Principle 5 - Use and value renewable resources and services
Habit 21: Make natural home cleaners
Habit 22: Start a worm farm
Habit 23: Cook with sticks
Habit 24: Reuse your wee
Habit 25: Reuse your packaging
Principle 6 - Produce no waste
Habit 26: Commit to a five-day no-waste challenge
Habit 27: Learn to mend:
Habit 28: Eat real food
Habit 29: Learn to love second-hand things
Habit 30: Compost everything
Principle 7 - Design from patterns to details
Habit 31: Make a base map
Habit 32: Start a garden or nature diary
Habit 33: Write a Will - and talk about it
Habit 34: Learn about your local climate
Habit 35: Get to know the soil beneath your feet
Principle 8 - Integrate rather than segregate
Habit 36: Reuse your household greywater
Habit 37: Keep chickens
Habit 38: Engage with the commons
Habit 39: Support a local person in need
Habit 40: Eat with friends and family
Principle 9 - Use small and slow solutions
Habit 41: Start a home seed bank
Habit 42: Make your own sourdough
Habit 43: Walk or ride there
Habit 44: Take your lunch
Habit 45: Plant a tree and take care of it
Principle 10 - Use and value diversity
Habit 46: Support your local pollinators
Habit 47: Make your own probiotic drinks
Habit 48: Install a gate in your side fence
Habit 49: Make a lizard hotel
Habit 50: Share a garden
Principle 11 - Use edges and value the marginal
Habit 51: Get to know your local fungi
Habit 52: Cook a meal outdoors
Habit 53: Join your local food co-op
Habit 54: Learn to identify and use local seaweeds
Habit 55: Explore your local gift economy
Principle 12 - Creatively use and respond to change:
Habit 56: Raise your voice on the climate crisis
Habit 57: Make an emergency plan
Habit 58: Do a first-aid course
Habit 59: Engage in mutual aid
Habit 60: Revisit your personal goal
Resources
References
Thank you
Index
Kirsten Bradley is the co-founder of Milkwood with Nick Ritar - together they've been teaching permaculture design and skills for living like it matters for more than 15 years. When she's not helping folks to create meaningful change through their everyday actions, Kirsten can be found tending her backyard ecosystem of veggies, bees, berries and family, on melukerdee country in lutruwita/Tasmania. Discover more at www.milkwood.net.
This book is all about a passion for sharing skills, igniting the
can-do, cultivating the possible, calming the chaos, delivering the
doable. And, above all else, connecting and caring for the
community. It's a home, a safe place to come and grow hope in what
is a challenging world. - Costa Georgiadis
Overflowing with information for our times - one of the best
permaculture books ever! - Hannah Moloney
Kirsten Bradley shows us that it is never one big action, but
rather a life of small, intentional, daily actions that truly make
a difference. This is how we empower ourselves, our families and
our communities to create a world in which we want to live.
- Paul West
The time is right for this volume and it is very welcome.
- Rosemary Morrow, permaculture elder
As author and activist, Kirsten Bradley walks her talk applying the
deep and ethical thinking behind permaculture to everyday habits
that she and her family have tested and documented through the very
successful Milkwood Permaculture Living Course. This book distils
the lessons learnt from helping so many others make positive
changes in their own lives. In the process it is an accessible
introduction to permaculture as powerful thinking tools for
regeneration and resilience. - Dr David Holmgren,
co-originator of permaculture
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