A permagarden is a sustainable, high-yield garden using permaculture techniques to grow food year-round, even in harsh climates.

The deeper you dig into the soil when first creating the garden, and the more organic carbon materials are incorporated at that time (compost, bio char, leaves, old wood chips, etc), the more water it can hold and the longer the water will be available in the soil. If the garden is in place before the rainy season and then captures that rain deep in its soil, then the dry season that follows would need hand watering just 2-3x per week. This is much less than what a regular garden needs because regular gardens that are mostly shallow-tilled have infertile subsoil and form a hard crust on the surface which sheds water away (hydrophobic soil). Whereas in a permagarden, the water soaks deep without running off and it goes right to the root zone. With each subsequent rainy season, a permagarden will need less and less frequent hand-watering because its moisture retention ability and overall soil health is cumulative.

Depends on the region. Common ones are collard greens, cauliflower, okra, potatoes (on berms, not in beds), onions, spinach, tomatoes, kale, eggplant, carrots, cabbage, peppers, fava beans, bush beans, beetroots, leek and amaranth.

After a family’s 4×4 meter permagarden is fully grown and established, it can provide 45% of the volume of a family’s food, very easily feeding a family of four

The figure of 45% actually also applies here, as on average a family can save 45% more money thanks to having a permagarden

  1. After 3-6 weeks: amaranth leaves, lettuce, eggplant
  2. After 6 weeks: Sukiwiki (collard greens and kale), spinach, bush beans
  3. After 9-13 weeks: carrots, tomatoes, sweet peppers, fava beans

Yes, crop rotation is a must and is very beneficial. For instance, beans can perform nitrogen fixation in the soil

Natural pesticide can be made from neem trees, which are usually locally available and free

Non-grain carbs can come from the permagarden’s potatoes and from the two fruit trees we give each family who we train. As for protein and fats, since a family with a permagarden doesn’t have to spend money buying vegetables at the market, they’re more able to buy necessities such as livestock, which can provide good protein and fats.

Join the movement! Reach out to The Permagardens Foundation to support, volunteer, or bring permagarden training to your community. Together, we can grow food security and resilience worldwide.