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Reading the Great Book of Life

Book Review:

The Living Landscape: How to Read and Understand it

Patrick Whitefield

Permanent Publications 2009

334pp

48 color photos

Living-Landscape-sm

When I first saw in the recent Permaculture Magazine that Patrick Whitefield had written a book on reading the landscape I became very excited and thought, “That’s probably a book David Holmgren would have liked to have written!”

Holmgren called it “reading the great Book of Life”- looking at the living landscape of the countryside  through the lens of ecology,botany, geology, archaeology, history and even politics and economics.

Observation of the natural world is the starting point of permaculture design and with this book Whitefield helps us gain an insight into the myriad of the many natural and human processes that make up our landscape, and how to interpret their  hidden indications.

Patrick Whitefield covers all of these impacts on the British Countryside, taking his examples from all over the country, and shows us how to be a kind of landscape detective, painstakingly uncovering the meaning of signs and indications of past land-use, some obvious – the absence of trees indicating ongoing grazing- some much less so- the horeshoe bat indicating an intact mosaic of different habitats.

The book begins with some  chapters on general patterns in the landscape and underlying features of   geology, soil and then climate and natural succession before moving onto more specific cases including animal signs; niches; succession;  Different Kinds of Woodlands; Grassland; Heaths and Moors; Water in the Landscape; and finally, Hedges and other field boundaries and Roads and Paths.

Throughout Patrick gives us pages from his extensive notebooks that he has kept over the years which show actual examples of reading the landscape in a wide range of landscape types he has encountered on travels up and down the country, from the Highlands of Scotland to the Somerset “Levels” – or Moors as they are more usually known locally; the remnants of diverse wildflower meadows still found on the chalk downs, and the semi-ancient wood of Lady Park Wood in the Wye valley.

Patrick is always an agreeable travel companion and makes fascinating observations throughout. The pleasure he takes at discovering new landscapes or unpicking the story of a woodland and how it got to have the species mix it has- the subtle interplay of geology, microclimate and grazing patterns- is always obvious, becoming most so when discovering a new hedgerow with large number of species ( a possible indicator of antiquity).

we have been using Patrick’s previous books, The Earth Care Manual and How to Make a Forest Garden on the Kinsale course for the past several years; The Living Landscape is another great addition which fills an important niche in permaculture literature. A fascinating and engaging read with great color photos,  it will have to find a place on every designers’ bookshelf.

4 Comments

  1. I just received this book in the mail. It is all the things you have said. I grew up roaming the woods, obsessed with plants and all their functions, animal tracks, scat, habits, stones, etc. All of this required hours and hours of protracted observation, as Mr Mollison would have it. The Living Landscape in my experience touches beautifully on the joy of learning that I have had in my life. I also recommend this book to all as a basis for our Permaculture work.

    Wednesday, October 28, 2009 at 5:10 am | Permalink
  2. Mark Fisher wrote:

    “The eternal dance between human and natural factors which goes to make up the landscape”

    That pretty much sums it up for the cultural landscapes of Britain. Do we need another book like this?

    Friday, January 8, 2010 at 4:36 pm | Permalink
  3. Mark Fisher wrote:

    Oh, and why is it that it takes Whitefield 10 pages to cover what could be done in one? And does anyone really believe those notebook entries were extemporaneous? Too many trees being sacrificed on someone who writes pedantically and indulgently.

    Friday, January 8, 2010 at 5:02 pm | Permalink
  4. Graham wrote:

    Seems a bit harsh Mark! What other books would you recommend on this topic- I didnt know there were that many.

    Friday, January 8, 2010 at 5:48 pm | Permalink

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