Details
From Patrick’s years of observing the British landscape and his wealth of knowledge, he explains how we can start to read the landscape. He helps us to connect much more deeply with our familiar countryside, its history and its uses. From looking at rock formations, soil, climate, people’s historical impact, woodlands, moors, grasslands, animals, plants, succession, water, roads, and boundaries, we can begin to understand the natural world around us and use this skill in our own permaculture designs.
Additional Information
| Author | Patrick Whitefield, Ben Law (Foreword) |
|---|---|
| Short title | The Living Landscape |
| Long title | The Living Landscape - How to Read and Understand It |
| Publisher | Permanent Publications |
| Page count | 344 |
| Language | No |
| ISBN-10 | 1856230430 |
| ISBN-13 | 9781856230438 |
Customer Reviews
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- A impressive piece of work, filling a niche where few books exist. Review by Agroforestry News
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A impressive piece of work, filling a niche where few books exist. Very little has been written about landscape reading ... here, Patrick Whitefield shares a lifetime's knowledge about the complex interactions that go to make up the fascinating and varied landscapes we see around us. Even if you think you can read a piece of land pretty well, this book will surprise and fascinate you by delving into the complexity of land in this country and how it has come to be as it is. (Posted on 01/07/2010)Review - The book is an excellent learning resource and guide for permaculturists working on the land and permaculture teachers Review by Pippa Johns, Permaculture magazine 61
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This new book by renowned permaculturist Patrick Whitefield is already the catalyst to a huge leap in my observation skills and my understanding of the landscape around me. It is a truly fascinating book, the result of Patrick s many years of looking and listening, taking notes, making sketches and asking questions on his walks, train journeys and travels from the Scottish Highlands to the South Downs. The book takes the reader on journey around the British landscape, telling all you need to know to understand how that landscape may have been formed, from rocks, through soil to vegetation and the intricate web of interactions between plants, animals, climate and people that makes a landscape what it is today: The eternal dance between human and natural factors which goes to make up the landscape . The book opens with a chapter on how to go about reading the landscape and Patrick is clear that we can never be absolutely sure that we know exactly what is going on, there are too many factors at work over too long a period of time. However by developing our skills of observation and understanding we can make a well informed guess. The following chapters then go on to look in detail at rocks, soil and climate, people's historical impact, animals and plants, woodlands, grasslands and moors. There are also chapters on succession or how changes in the landscape happen over time, water and roads and boundaries. There is a huge amount of information here, but the text is always accessible and easy to read and it certainly held my interest. Each chapter is interspersed with diagrams, sketches and notes that Patrick has taken on walks and train rides over the years. These really enhance the book and as a more visual learner were important to my understanding. They illustrate the points being made in the text with real life examples and give the reader a sense of connection with the author and his world this is in no way a dry text book but the distillation of one person s passion and connection with the land around him. The book is an excellent learning resource and guide for permaculturists working on the land and permaculture teachers. I am sure it will go on the highly recommended list for our permaculture courses here in Brighton. But its audience will I hope be much, much wider than this. Whilst Patrick never shies away from mentioning permaculture and his work as a designer and teacher, the book is in no way limited to being a permaculture text. It will appeal to a very wide audience of people who feel some connection to the British landscape and who are interested to learn more about it. For myself, I now find myself looking at the landscapes around my with new eyes, understanding where before I would barely have noticed, why the hills are a certain shape, or that plant is growing where it is; seeing ridge and furrow shapes in the field and knowing how they were made and why, noticing the plants in the woods I visit weekly and beginning to form an understanding of the wood s age and history as a result. It feels like the beginning of a journey that will serve me greatly in my permaculture work and will deepen my relationship with the land I live in. (Posted on 01/07/2010)Review
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