We are looking forward to seeing everyone at the convergence which is happening next weekend! In order to make sure you are prepared for the convergence please read through our Survival Guide below.
Carpooling to the Convergence
2018 Wisconsin Permaculture Convergence Menu
Survival Guide: Prepare for the Convergence!
Sponsor Spotlight: Great Rivers and Lakes Permaculture Institute
Great Rivers and Lakes Permaculture Institute (GRLPI) is happy to be a sponsor of the 2018 Wisconsin Permaculture Convergence. GRLPI is a professional development organization for permaculture practitioners in the Great Lakes and Ohio River Valley region. It also serves as a regional hub for Permaculture Institute of North America.
Mentoring Children Through Permaculture
Pre-Convergence Workshop Intensive with Dan Halsey (Sept. 13th & 14th)
Food forests and forest gardening bring together the best ecological systems that allow us sustainable and high-yield harvests. In temperate northern climates we have the best resources and environment for a wide selection of plants and trees. This two-day course will focus on the permaculture design process and drawing skills. We will be using cold climate strategies for solutions and pencil process to develop professional level presentations of designs.
Regeneration Nation & Learning from our Work: Women in Midwest Permaculture
Respite, Family Reunion and Chance to Learn
For about as many years as I have been going to the summertime Wisconsin Permaculture Convergence, I have also attended in the wintertime Wisconsin Garden Expo.
In February 2018, I attended my fifth Expo. On Saturday, while talking with someone who stopped by the Madison Area Permaculture Guild booth about the books we had for sale and what the Guild does, I discovered many similarities between both annual events.
Applying Permaculture Principles and Methods for Building Community Abundance
This weeks 2018 session leader feature is on Johnathan Dodd. Johnathan resides with his family at New Earth Farm & Goods, a 5 acre polyculture farm that boasts diversified perenials, fungi, and multi-species grazing. He has taken root and planted in Papillion, NE for the past 6 years, alongside his spouse and three children.
How Permaculture Changed My Life, and How It Could Change Yours
When I was five years old, in 1976, my parents moved our family of five from our safe, stable and economically viable lives just outside Milwaukee, Wisconsin, to a 140 acre farm overlooking the rolling hills of Western Wisconsin's Driftless region where we threw safety, stability and economic viability out the barn door. What I got in return was a tremendous sense of self reliance, which is not self-sufficiency, a conversation we could have at the convergence coming up in September. My family also got to meet and learn from our new neighbors and others who recently moved to the area, because in those days, and in those parts, there was no Amazon and no one had every piece of equipment or every bit of knowledge required to cultivate the land and care for livestock. This is a long way to say that little did I know our move introduced me to my first permacuture community and principles and I didn't even know it.