2021 WPC Cancelled

Due to low registration, the planning team has decided to cancel the Wisconsin Permaculture Convergence for 2021. Without enough registrants this close to the event start, we are unable to cover necessary costs and deposits. Whether it was prior engagements or the current situation with COVID many people were unable to join us this year.

If you have already registered for the event, we will reach out to coordinate a refund over the next two weeks. We will be contacting you via email so please check you email. We look forward to you joining us in 2022.

We would like to extend a big thank you to all of the people who provided great sessions and we hope you can provide those opportunities for us all in 2022.

Please reach out to us if you have any questions or input on how we can continue to improve this convergence in the future.

Lead a Session & Early Bird Registration

Lead a Session & Early Bird Registration

While we received the rain we needed, the convergence is still in need of session leaders for this year. We hoping that you can help us spread the word so session leaders will rain down upon the convergence to water the minds and bodies of our community. Session leaders will be reimbursed for their mileage to and from the convergence as well as attend the convergence at no cost.

2020 Convergence Cancelled

2020 Wisconsin Permaculture Convergence Cancelled

Due to the current pandemic, the WPC planning team has decided to cancel this year’s Convergence. We apologize for the late notice but like many, things have been interesting. We look forward to a Convergence in 2021. We hope everyone is staying safe and thinking about what resilience looks in our communities and homesteads.

2020 Wisconsin Permaculture Convergence

2020 Wisconsin Permaculture Convergence

After a hiatus in 2019, the Wisconsin Permaculture Convergence is back in 2020. This year’s convergence will take place on Labor Day weekend, September 4th - 6th. It will be held on the same property as the 2018 WPC location on the Carlson Homestead in Rio, WI.

Sponsor Spotlight: Great Rivers and Lakes Permaculture Institute

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

Mentoring Children Through Permaculture

This weeks 2018 session leader feature is on Andrea Fourness. Andrea is an educator and co-owner of Deciduous Learning Network, an organization dedicated to connecting people to nature. She has been involved in environmental education for over 10 years.

Pre-Convergence Workshop Intensive with Dan Halsey (Sept. 13th & 14th)

 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

Regeneration Nation & Learning from our Work: Women in Midwest Permaculture

This weeks 2018 session leader feature is on our keynote speaker Lindsay Rebhan. Lindsay is a co-owner of Ecological Design, certified Permaculture Designer and ecological consultant. She is passionate about seeing the land alive with life, employment, learning and nourishment.

Zero Waste is a goal that is Ethical

Zero Waste is a goal that is “Ethical, economical, efficient and visionary,” as defied by the Zero Waste International Alliance (ZWIA) (also, how couldn't you love the acronym ZWIA?) Zero waste can guide people in changing their lifestyles and practices to emulate sustainable natural cycles, where all discarded materials are designed to become resources for others to use and not burn or bury them.

As we organize the fifth annual Wisconsin Permaculture Convergence, I am thinking about the unintended waste stream that is developed by this (and any other) event, and what we as organizers and attendees can do to reduce (or eliminate?) waste ultimately destined for a landfill. This blog suggests some of the permaculture principles that may inform us as we move toward such a goal.

The most obvious is Principle Six: Produce no Waste. By valuing and making use of all the resources that are available to us, nothing goes to waste.

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The icon of the worm represents one of the most effective recyclers of organic materials, converting plant and animal ‘waste’ into valuable plant food. The proverb “a stitch in time saves nine” reminds us that timely maintenance prevents waste, while “waste not, want not” reminds us that it’s easy to be wasteful in times of abundance, but this waste can be a cause of hardship later.

I am also reminded of principle five: Use and Value Renewable Resources and Services. This principle reminds us to make the best use of nature’s abundance to reduce our consumptive behavior and dependence on non-renewable resources.

The horse icon represents both a renewable service and renewable resource. It can be used to pull a cart, plough or log and it can even be eaten – though a non-consuming use is preferred over a consuming one. The proverb “let nature take its course” reminds us that control over nature through excessive resource use and high technology is not only expensive, but can have a negative effect on our environment

But before we aim for a Wisconsin Permaculture Convergence that “produces no waste" or "Use and value renewable resources and services", I think we have to keep two principles in mind this year; "Observe and Interact" and "Use Small and Slow Solutions."

Image from David Holmgren's book "12 Principles of Permaculture"

Image from David Holmgren's book "12 Principles of Permaculture"

When we observe and interact, we take the time to engage with nature or a situation such as an event and design solutions that suit the particular situation. The icon for this design principle represents a person ‘becoming’ a tree. In observing nature and the situations we are in, it is important to take different perspectives to help understand what is going on with the various elements in the system. The proverb “Beauty is in the eye of the beholder” reminds us that we place our own values on what we observe, yet in nature, there is no right or wrong, only different.

My memories of the last four convergences are that we have not generated a tremendous amount of waste. However, I know that we have had bags of trash, recycling and compostables (and some of each contaminated in with the other) that had to go somewhere. Additionally, in thinking to past convergence events, I have no knowledge of the waste stream the catering situation generated.

So while the idea of a zero waste event is extremely appealing to me, and there may be ways that we can eliminate or redirect more “waste” this year, our task as an organizing team and as participants is to observe and interact with this year’s event and with our waste stream to see what options there are to further reduce and ultimately eliminate waste by redirecting it to useful purposes for future events.

Image from David Holmgren's book "12 Principles of Permaculture"

Image from David Holmgren's book "12 Principles of Permaculture"

And in order not to drive ourselves to frustration, or attempt to put actions in place that actually aren’t useful or practical, or have unintended downstream consequences, the last permaculture principle to follow is number nine, "Use small and slow solutions.”

Small and slow systems are easier to maintain than big ones, making better use of local resources and produce more sustainable outcomes. The snail is both small and slow, it carries its home on its back and can withdraw to defend itself when threatened. The proverb “the bigger they are, the harder they fall” reminds us of the disadvantages of excessive size and growth while “slow and steady wins the race” encourages patience while reflecting on a common truth in nature and society.

I look forward to observing with you, to thinking about producing no waste, to use the waste resources we have for other purposes, to taking small steps and observing and interacting with nature and our waste to work toward small and slow solutions for this and future permaculture convergences.

Joshua Feyen is part of the organizing team for the Wisconsin Permaculture Convergence. He lives in Madison, Wisconsin where him and his partner tend their intensive urban lot which is home to chickens and a large variety of annual and perennial pla…

Joshua Feyen is part of the organizing team for the Wisconsin Permaculture Convergence. He lives in Madison, Wisconsin where him and his partner tend their intensive urban lot which is home to chickens and a large variety of annual and perennial plants.

 
 
 

Interested in attending the 2018 Wisconsin Permaculture Convergence?