Starting our Permaculture Journey on a Homestead in the Hills

in homesteading •  7 years ago  (edited)

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This post is about how I decided to get into permaculture on a homestead near the hills of Kodaikanal, located in South India.

As 2016 came to a close, I'd finished my work at the Sharanalaya School and didn't have anything else to keep me occupied. I had a few options to consider and was at a sort of crossroads in my life. I was still considering an environmental design master's degree but also noticed that I had spent the entire year doing my own brand of eco design to keep me afloat. The master's degree would get me added recognition, but was it really necessary?
My clients never asked for my qualifications as my work spoke for itself. There are also cheaper and better ways to acquire first hand knowledge on environmental design techniques, so is it truly sustainable to move to a different country and pay whopping tuition fees for the privilege to learn? I was also inspired by this quote from Sylvia Plath.

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Image from pixabay.

Good ol' Sylive tends to border on the macabre. Personally I don't feel like you have to be limited to one fig. There are people who juggle multiple figs, with the smarter ones canning or pickling them for later. I agree with her that it is pointless to sit and wonder at the direction life could take without any concrete action. As we get older, life becomes more about the things we don't do than the things we do. In this analogy, I reached out and picked up the fig of a self sufficient life using permaculture to sustain myself, returning to my roots and living off the land. There are a few factors that led to this decision.

It was extremely fortuitous that my parents decided to invest in an acre of land in the hills around five years prior. Up till this point, the land was not being used for anything. It's unfortunate that a large barrier into permaculture is owning land in the first place. I already had the base on which to develop my dreams. As I'd mentioned, going to college abroad requires a large sum of money, and I felt that instead of spending it on a couple years of tuition we could instead spend it on developing this land that would last several lifetimes. I discussed this with my parents and I'm lucky to have them aboard this crazy train of thought, being the solid support holding me afloat and enabling me to take this journey.

I'm also a firm believer in not stopping the world I don't want, but instead creating the one I do. The environmental design course I was considering aims on tackling problems on a large scale. I applaud the people who dedicate their lives on that mission, but felt it wasn't personally for me. My upbringing and the fact that we had a small piece of land felt like the cosmos was aligning itself in providing the means to an end. It's perhaps a bit selfish to work on my dream, but I feel that a lot of small differences will eventually lead to a big one. Volunteering on farms previously made me realize that this path is not only possible, but extremely lucrative. I also hope to some day be the catalyst in starting more people on this journey, just as others have been for me. The first few months of 2017 were spent visiting our land and preparing for the long journey ahead.

The Land

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Our land is located around 20 kilometers away from Kodaikanal near a village called Poombarai that literally translates to the valley of flowers. It's beautiful slice of heaven nestled in the Palani Hills of Tamil Nadu.

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We don't have a lot of horizontal space on our piece of land, with most of it being vertical in the form of around 10-12 terraces.

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There is currently no access by road, and getting to our land involves a bit of a hike to reach it. The walks are rather meditative and are often accompanied by four legged friends as guides.

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The first few months of 2017 were spent frequently visiting the land to plan out its development. We started off with not much more than a slope on a hill and had to plan out everything from scratch, starting with fencing it off and levelling out our terraces. I also thought I was alone in the middle of nowhere, but discovered that I have neighbours who run a backpacker's lodge called Hike 'N' Heal nearby. They get a lot of visitors and our little corner is not as deserted as I thought it was!

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Time lapse from Hike 'N' Heal.

It took me awhile to find them as initially I used to take the long route to our land. One day, I took a chance on an alternative route and discovered a thriving community I had no idea about previously.

I'm more convinced than ever that I chose the right road to follow. I'd rather wake up to this view everyday than live in skyscraper and own fancy cars. All I need is the sun and the rain. This was the beginning of our permaculture journey. Stay tuned to find out how exactly we went about developing our land as total novices through our adventures in the hills.

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Jaw dropping beautiful my friend

Aw, it really is isn't it? Blessed to be able to do this and have the support both online and offline.

So beautiful. Your area is similar to mine, in the set of four photos, the two on the right look just like my part of Montana, but I just dont live in as remote an area. I agree with you, that we should make the world we want ! Inspiring.

Thank you! The mountains have so much charm. We are kinda remote, but perhaps that's a good thing? Glad to have shared some inspiration, I get so much of it here.

Congratulations on finding your own little piece of heaven! It looks and sounds beautiful. I am so happy for you!

Thank you! Finding people like you here has given me the inspiration and motivation to keep trudging down this road. Excited for the future!

Likewise @soulturtle!! Keep up the great work!

looks like an amazing journey. this sort of adventure is something i hope to undertake someday. good luck my friend!

Thank you! Yes, it's been quite the adventure. Still have a long way to go but as the saying goes a journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step. Hope you get to embark on your adventure soon too!

This looks really beautiful @soulturtle.
Congratulations and hope everything turns out to be awesome!!

Thank you, I hope so too!

I think you made the right choice choosing land learning over book learning. Lots of potential it looks like with terraces and a nearby community, what a blessing! Reminds me to take different pathways in my life. Thanks for sharing, stoked to see how it evolves! <3

Yeah, there is so much potential to uncover. Feels like we've been transitioning all this time and this year is when we can truly shine. People like you give me the inspiration to keep trudging along! Gotta lot of new ideas to implement, and will continue to share and grow within the amazing homesteading community here :)

Great post and loved the Sylvia quote. I am by no means a homesteader or anything like that but I respect and admire the people that do it .

Thank you for dropping by. I'm far off from being an actual homesteader too, but enjoying the journey so far and hope to get there someday. Sylvia writes beautifully but tends to be a little dark at times. She's great though!

She does write beautifully and I like a bit of darkness . One of my descriptions she says in "bell Jar" is she describes someone as "mushroomy"

How are the terraces built and what are their structural support? How long have they been on site?

They were built using a JCB, a sorta mix between a scoopy thing and a bulldozer. They got done in stages and were reinforced with rocks. I'll do a post on that eventually so you can see that progression.

I'll look forward to that! Usually the structural part is the hardest - in your case, if the stones were not available at the site, they had to be shipped at great expense and then built as a wall. How high is that wall by the way? We have to do two small terraces in our place as well, hence all the questions! :)

Haha, they'll be answered soon. Pictures speak more than words. The terrace heights vary though. Some are around 18 feet, some around 8 and a few small ones at around 3. They were already sort of pre-formed on the mountain, we just levelled and reinforced them.

Sometimes life puts the pieces in place for us, we just need to pause for a moment and see them. I think it would be hard to go back to academic learning when you've already been doing it in real time.

Sometimes I think we can achieve more by doing things in smaller scale and showing others it can be done so that they can follow. Lots of little actions make a huge impact.

Will you be building a house on your little bit of paradise or will it be more like camping?

Academic learning has its benefits, but life is the best teacher in my opinion. A balance between the two is ideal, with some amount of research before implementation.

Yes, I also believe a lot of small differences will eventually make a large one. I am choosing a rather unconventional path and will hopefully be an inspiration, just as others have been for me.

At the moment, I stay in town and commute there but I hope to get a tiny wattle and daub hut up this year. Nothing too fancy, a functional minimal house. A step above camping and a step below a house.

Incredible opportunity, and a wise choice my friend! It seems to me like you realigned your life with your goals, and abundance will soon rise to meet you in glory! The land has great potential, beautiful area too-- excited to see where this journey finds root!

Thank you, yeah seems like the last few years have been transition years and both the cosmos and my ideals are aligning themselves into a time of abundance. Even through joining steemit and meeting all you wonderful people, 2018 is gonna be epic :)

Agreed!! I feel like the planetary cycles are moving towards some radical social and mental changes through our world 🙏very excited about all the info to be shared after reading through these comments. Merry met!

Excellent post man. This is incredible. Your slice of heaven looks wonderful.

Glad you're pursuing a dream outside of normal conventions and getting your hands dirty :)

I wish you the best on your journeys. Infinite Lovewaves

Turns out this alternative route is actually gathering a lot of traffic. It's been great to find so many homesteaders here and in the real world who've given me the encouragement to keep at it. Thanks for the wishes and lovewaves. Holds up mirror to reflect some back.

Nice post Soulturtle!

I love the green and the vistas you have before you. Stressed out suits spend thousands of dollars at the end of their penny pinching year to see what you see for a week before going back to work.

I miss being outdoors and away from the city. In my little corner I have a small back yard that is brick paved... hasnt stopped me from growing so food of my own there.

Keep us posted!

What a beautiful observation. Really puts things in perspective. My whole life is a vacation, haha.

I'm glad you still find ways to grow stuff even under gritty city lights. That's really important. I'm truly privileged to get to do this away from the city, but so glad you find your own way in the middle of it.

Exactly. There is a story my father told me... well told me over and over.

There was a man from Johannesburg who went to the West Coast for a holiday to do fishing. (West Coast of South Africa is visited by tourists every year.)

And on the beach he met a local fisherman, standing by the rocks with his own rod. The fisherman had an old rod and the man from Johannesburg has a shiny new set of gear that cost him thousands of Rands.

Regardless the two of them had a great time chatting as they did their fishing. As normal, talk drifted towards money and the businessman heard that the fisherman had no job. He had no car and didnt have the means to buy a new one.

So the businessman said to the fisherman. "I have a big business in Johannesburg. You can come with me and I will give you a job. Work you way up the corporate ladder and you can be a manager or even a partner in the company. You will be very rich."

The fisherman thought about this and asked. "So after years of work I would have a lot of money?" The businessman agreed and the fisherman asked. "Once you have so much money and you want to retire. What would you do?"

The businessman thought about it and said. "Well I would get a house by the sea and I will likely spend every day just drinking wine and fishing."

To this the fisherman replied. "I already have all that. I fish enough to trade in for a few Rands for my red wine and a couple groceries and my wife and I eat a lot of fish."

My father would usually conclude this by explaining exactly what it all meant but I am sure you get it. Sometimes living simple is living exactly how you would dream to do it. But with extra steps in a corporate ladder and rat-race.

What traps Mankind make for ourselves!

Beautiful story, your father sounds like an awesome person. I appreciate you taking the time and effort to re-tell this story here. It deserves a post of it's own. Perhaps you could do a post on more dad stories? I really connected to this. Money is not the only wealth you can have and a lot of people don't realise that. Of course, I'm lucky that i have the privilege of working on land like this, a lot of people are not in the system by choice. Wish I could upvote this multiple times. Thanks for sharing!

I was thinking of including a weekly "slice of life" post on Sundays?

If someone wants to know the author?

Plus stories and events and such.

"firm believer in not stopping the world I don't want, but instead creating the one I do" this is the way to live, the land really looks like heaven and i can only imagine how fun the hikes to get there are the views you enjoy are really gorgeous, so congrats!

Thank you, the hikes are indeed pretty awesome. I'm only just beginning this journey, but it's been fun all along. Just gotta go with the flow and keep on keeping on.

Great story @soulturtle. Really looking forward to seeing your progress. Hike and heal sounds interesting. Are they online anywhere?

Thanks, yeah discovering them was awesome. They have a facebook page you can find here.

Are you there yet? I want to visit!!

Nope, still in the city. Last weekend here. Are you gonna be free? Let's meet up?