Unitarian Universalist Church of Bloomington, Indiana Seeking the Spirit | Building Community | Changing the World
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Permaculture Project

On our church grounds, we have applied permaculture principles by reducing the amount of lawn we have to maintain and replacing some of it with native and drought-resistant plantings including bushes and trees that provide fruit or nuts for people and animals, flowers that attract pollinating insects, and milkweed for monarch caterpillars. These improvements have created wind barriers and/or shade, reduced sheet erosion on slopes, and enhanced the soil fertility.

This has also created a carbon sink, reducing our carbon footprint.

Picures of our Monarch Waystation

The term “permaculture” is derived from the words “permanent agriculture.” Permaculture refers to a design system that incorporates natural principles and calls on us to live in harmony with the earth.  The three ethics of permaculture are:

  • Earth Care
  • People Care
  • Fair Share

Photos of tree planting on our grounds

Photos of our evergreen windbreak

Permaculture is based on 12 principles, first articulated by Robert Holmgren

Many of these principles align with Unitarian Universalist values. 

  1. Observe and Interact
  2. Catch and Store Energy
  3. Obtain a Yield
  4. Apply Self-Regulation and Accept Feedback
  5. Use and Value Renewable Resources and Services
  6. Produce No Waste
  7. Design from Patterns to Details
  8. Integrate Rather Than Segregate
  9. Use Small and Slow Solutions
  10. Use and Value Diversity
  11. Use Edges and Value the Marginal
  12. Creatively Use and Respond to Change

Our Dwarf Cherry Tree