Permaculture Design Certificate Course

This is a reminder… exactly one month until the PDC, register NOW to join us at the Phipps Garden Center!

6 WEEKENDS (January to April 2011):
Jan 29-30; Feb 12-13, 26-27; Mar 12-13, 26-27; Apr 2, 9:00am to 4:30pm

– Earn your internationally recognized Permaculture Design Certification!
– Share 6 weekends immersed in a fun, supportive learning environment!
– Increase your understanding of local ecosystems and your confidence in ecological design
– Experience a thorough, on-site, permaculture design from start to finish for a historic landmark
located in an urban setting
– Learn practical skills to nourish your landscape, home, community
– Visit rural and urban examples of permaculture systems
– Empower yourself to create positive, regenerative changes in your life, your landscape, and your
community

Course Topics:
Permaculture Ethics & Principles
Observation & Ecological Design
Site Analysis & Assessment
Edible Forest Gardens
Water Harvesting
Natural Building
Compost & Soil Building
Greenhouse & Bioshelter Design
Mapping, Surveying, & Presentation
Group Design Projects & Design Charettes
Transition Town Movement

Fee:$770 members, $850 non-members

Lead Instructors:
Darrell Frey of Three Sisters Farm and Bioshelter
Elizabeth Lynch of Phipps Conservatory and Botanical Gardens
Juliette Jones of Pittsburgh Permaculture

For more information or to register, call the Garden Center at (412) 441-4442 ext. 3925. Or visit the Phipps website to download a registration form.

Be your own landscape designer! This intensive weekend course will teach you the secrets of ecological design; learn how to garden like nature! Capture and store water on your site, reducing irrigation costs; build soil and use plants that mulch, reducing your need for artificial fertilizers; and design more sustainable garden systems, reducing your maintenance and maximizing the yield and aesthetics of your property. Visit local examples of permaculture design, use mapping and site analysis tools and complete a guided design project. This course will challenge both beginning designers and experienced gardeners alike.
Permaculture design is rooted in agriculture and horticulture, yet is far reaching and interdisciplinary in nature, making connections to city planning, ecology, architecture, and appropriate technology. This course covers the foundations of ecological design and addresses how these concepts can be applied to both urban and rural settings in order to create regenerative landscapes.

Pittsburgh Hardiness Zones

*Click here for an Update*

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A short discussion on the hardiness zones in and around Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and how they are changing.

The old USDA hardiness zone map issued in 1990, which incorporated data from 1974-1986, places Pittsburgh well within zone 6 with zone 5 not far off to the north. If you follow our longitude, you would not run into zone 7 until somewhere around the Virginia, North Carolina border.

old hardiness zone map

The 1990 USDA hardiness zone map.


We all know things have changed since 1990 and the map was supposed to also, but the new map, due in 2005 was never released. There is a lot of speculation about why it wasn’t released due to the administration at the time and their stance on climate change. Whatever the reason (I have read it was because it wasn’t interactive enough as a digital-based map or that the USDA wasn’t satisfied with a 15 year data set) it is now 5 years since a new version of the USDA hardiness zone map was due and we still don’t have an update.

Fortunately, the National Arbor Day Foundation took it upon themselves to update the map. Using the same sources of data that the USDA used to create its 1990 map, and a fifteen year set of data (three years longer than the previously accepted 1990 map) the National Arbor Day Foundation released a map in 2006.

updated hardiness zone map

The 2006 Arbor Day Foundation Hardiness Zone Map created using 15 years of data from the same sources the USDA used for its earlier map.

the changing hardiness zones of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

A zip-code search for my house indicated that Pittsburgh is in zones 6-7 according to the Arbor Day Foundation map.

As you can see there are some very significant changes for the Pittsburgh area and Pennsylvania in general. Zone 5 has retreated far to the north, only expressing itself in the north central part of state, Zone 6 is firmly settled in our region, perhaps even slightly north, and most surprisingly, you can see a spot of zone 7 sitting right in the Pittsburgh locale (the search of my zip-code confirmed this, see the image to the left).

The following maps compare the 1990 USDA version (with subzones concentrated into their larger categories) with the updated 2006 version published by the Arbor Day Foundation. The lighter red swaths striping the country indicate those areas have increased one full zone from the map published twenty years ago.

global warming effects hardiness zones



So does this mean I’ll soon be growing date palms and citrus. Most likely, no. As this past year has proved, though the planet continues to heat and climate shifts, our weather will not follow the same patterns it once did only a few degrees warmer. In fact these global changes have and will continue to cause increased variability in the weather.

Keep your eyes peeled for the release of the updated USDA map, which was supposed to be out in 2009, but again they missed the deadline. I will let you know if I hear anything.

-Troy

*Much of the information in this article comes from the USDA, The National Arbor Day Foundation, and Raintree Nursery.

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*February 2011 Update*

I emailed the USDA to get clarification on the new map, here is their response:

We do not provide forecasts of when a publication, which the USDA Plant Hardiness Map counts as, even throughthe new one will be first available on the web.  Two prototypes have been created to allow for the analysis of issues that still need work, but the map itself requires that a contractor “build” the application that will actually be hosted on line as the map.  If you speak computer geek, you will understand how “application” differs from a simple prototype.

The process of setting up contracts for the application to be built and for the web hosting so initial demand do not crash ARS or USDA servers (as happened when My Pyramid first went on line to much larger initial demand than expects), have been slowed and complicated by several factors, among them the general government procurement, the lack of a budget being passed which can preclude spending money), and the increasingly complicated security processes for government web sites that have to be met and dealt with.

Prior to the advent of some new technology (we are not getting out of my depth with computer systems knowledge, so I am parroting our IT people now), the size of the database for the interactive map and the large expected numbers of viewers, especially in the beginning, made it very difficult to find the vendors we need.  Cloud computing and other advances have offered some new avenues, but government procurement requirements make inching toward contracts a long process.

Once we have application design and hosting contracts in place, it will take about four months to have the website available.