Although permaculture often focuses on designing and implementing systems on a larger scale, the principles can certainly be applied to smaller-scale projects such as bucket gardening. Here’s how bucket gardening ties in with some permaculture principles:
- Observe and communicate: Bucket gardening requires careful observation of your plants and their needs, adapting to their water, sunlight and nutrient needs. This is in line with the permaculture principle of observing and interacting with the natural environment to make informed decisions.
- Capturing and storing energy: By placing buckets in optimal locations to capture sunlight, you effectively store solar energy in the plants. Additionally, using buckets to grow food can reduce the energy required to transport food from the farm to the table.
- Use and value renewable resources: Buckets can be reused and repurposed, which is in line with the principle of valuing renewable resources and services. The use of organic soil, compost and natural fertilizers in gardening also reflects this principle.
- Do not produce waste: Bucket gardening can contribute to a waste-free system by composting plant waste and recycling or reusing buckets and other materials.
- Design from patterns to details: Starting with the overall goal of creating a sustainable garden, bucket gardening allows for detailed planning in terms of plant selection, spacing, and planting companion plants within the confines of each bucket.
- Integrate instead of separate: A bucket garden allows different plants to be grown together in separate buckets, but within the same space, promoting biodiversity and beneficial plant interactions.
- Use small and slow solutions: Bucket gardening is a small-scale, manageable approach to growing food, especially suitable for beginners or those with limited space, and reflects the principle of starting small and building from there.
While bucket gardening itself may not encompass all aspects of a permaculture system, it can certainly be part of a larger permaculture design or serve as a stepping stone to more integrated permaculture practices.