Knoxville Permaculture Guild

Building Permanent Culture in Knoxville

Chad Hellwinckel's Friends

  • Paul Berney
  • Travetta Johnson
  • Brian Miller
  • Laura Rigell
  • Holly Jones
  • Geoffrey Trowbridge
  • Eleanor Scott
  • John McCollum
  • Nicole Hamonic
  • Marcie Elaine McBee
  • Cherie Brown
  • Kenny Ray Haden
  • John & Kim Grubbs
  • Ash McDaniel
  • Matthew Langholtz

Chad Hellwinckel's Groups

Latest Activity

Cheryl Morgan replied to Chad Hellwinckel's discussion Marketplace
"Great for green roofs...I have 35-45 different named varieties of sedums for sale. $3.00 for a 4" pot. great rock gardens, dish gardens, or green roofs. Contact me at Cheryl@Smokymistgardens.com"
Thursday
Cheryl Morgan replied to Chad Hellwinckel's discussion Marketplace
"Have some beautiful Muscadines, the golden type, Everybearing Ozark Beauty strawberry plants, and Triple Crown Thornless Blackberry Plants. The Muscadines and Blackberry plants are growing now in 1 gallon pots and are $7.00 a pot. Some of the…"
Thursday
Chad Hellwinckel posted a video

Fukuoka gets better soil with no-till

http://www.permies.com Larry Korn spent three years with Masanobu fukuoka and did the translation for the excellent book "One Straw Revolution". He is now a ...
May 13
Chad Hellwinckel commented on Brian Miller's blog post Evidence of our passing
""Be passersby" !"
Apr 23
Jonathan Hatcher replied to Chad Hellwinckel's discussion Marketplace
"Check out our natural building course at the end of the month. Besides teaching you how to be an earth friendly badass, we also provide steroids for your imagination. Link is to our events page with all the relevant information.…"
Apr 16
Brian & Betsy Liebenow commented on Chad Hellwinckel's group Knoxville Urban Hen Coalition
"So, we live in west Knoxville, our coop is done, inspected and approved. We got our approval from Animal Control. Now, where is the best place to get chickens locally? We'd rather not raise them from baby chicks so we'd prefer pullets. Any…"
Apr 10
Brian & Betsy Liebenow joined Chad Hellwinckel's group
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Knoxville Urban Hen Coalition

This group is committed to building a community of responsible urban hen keepers in Knoxville.
Apr 10
Jake Livesay replied to Chad Hellwinckel's discussion Marketplace
"I've got a couple hundred fathead minnows for sale in Karns - some rosy some grey - $3 per dozen.  These are good aquarium fish or bait for crappie and bass. Jake Livesay 865-771-8132"
Apr 8

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Chad Hellwinckel's Page

Chad Hellwinckel's Blog

The Urban Food Corridor of Knoxville in 2022.

 

It is 2022, and as you move around East Knoxville’s urban food corridor, you see that the old vacant lots are growing vegetables, fruits, nuts, herbs, and flowers on good soil. Some have greenhouses growing for winter markets. Some have integrated fish farming as well. Most urban farmers are individuals managing 3 to 6 lots within a few blocks of each other. A few are run by community non-profit organizations for educational purposes (training young farmers),…

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Posted on December 19, 2012 at 12:00am — 1 Comment

'Do Nothing" Farming in Thailand

This is a good write up of what has been happening in Asian agriculture. Farmers in Thailand are finding it in their interest to apply agro-ecological practices:

http://www.solutions-site.org/node/47

This is another example of how the first adopters of practices that will be commonplace throughout the world in another 100 years are happening in poorer regions by farmers with small plots and…

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Posted on August 29, 2012 at 8:50am — 4 Comments

The Drought of '12

As I'm laying here recovering from a back injury, I've had time to look into how our nation's crops are doing this year. Wow! 3/4 of the corn crop is under severe drought. Corn prices are up over 50% in the last month, soybeans are up almost 30%, and the USDA says they are still assessing the damage. No rain in sight yet and we're probably looking at another record spike in prices. Here's an article on it : …

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Posted on July 17, 2012 at 8:30pm — 6 Comments

Barrel-Ponics

Fish and vegetables + water cleansing. Low tech. Can be small or big. Can fit in an urban backyard.

Here's some videos from the Urban Farm Guys:

part1 : http://youtu.be/xSTh-UnuqgQ

 

part 2: …

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Posted on May 10, 2012 at 9:32am

Profile Information

Why are you interested in joining the guild? (If you are outside the Knoxville region, why are you interested in joing the guild?)
I'm interested in pushing as many ideas, schemes, and techniques of local food and forest production, water catchment, water treatment, energy production and conservation into actual implementation. As we slide down the other side of cheap oil, permaculture gives me something positive to DO...but going it alone is not a good option. It's all relatively new and the possibilities are so wide that its going to take a lot of sharing of knowledge, experiments and mistakes. I hope the guild will link people together and help us all push this great work forward. And, most importantly, I think it will be fun.
What neighborhood do you live in?
God Bless South Knoxville (and Parkridge too!)
What skills or experiences do you have that can be shared?
I've built some cob walls, dry-stack rock work, and rainwater catchment. I have experience constructing edible forest gardens, sheet mulch gardens, composting outhouses, and raising backyard hens. I'm certified as a permaculture consultant through a class with the Bloomington, IN "Permaculture Activist" folks (Peter Bane, Keith Johnson and Rhonda Baird), and speak on the subject occasionally.
About me:
I grew up in Olathe, Kansas, and attended St. Olaf college in Northfield Minnesota. After college, I spent several years working and learning at the Land Institute, an agricultural research farm in Salina, Kansas. I also served as a Peace Corps volunteer in Panama and with the US Forest Service in Arizona, New Mexico and Utah.

I received my MS in Agricultural Economics in 1996 and a doctorate in geography at the University of Tennessee in 2008. I am presently a research assistant professor at the University of Tennessee’s Agricultural Policy Analysis Center. My work there focuses on modeling the impact of agricultural policies on the economy, landuse, and the environment. I'm trying to shift my time to building local food systems. I was the winner of the 2009 Farm Foundation’s policy contest for my essay entitled, “Peak Oil and the Necessity of Transitioning to Regenerative Agriculture”. My wife, Tracie Hellwinckel, and I co-founded the Knoxville Permaculture Guild, and I've been appointed by Mayor Haslem to the Knoxville Food Policy Council.

Chad Hellwinckel's Discussions

LandLink

Started Oct 9, 2012

Marketplace
9 Replies

Started this discussion. Last reply by Cheryl Morgan on Thursday.

Free Land

Started May 14, 2009

Chad Hellwinckel's Videos

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Comment Wall (41 comments)

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At 5:05pm on March 17, 2012, Laura Rigell said…

Hi Chad!

I am a co-founder of the Tennessee Youth Environmental Network (TennYEN), a coalition of high school environmental clubs.  We are holding our first Youth Empowerment Summit this June and are looking for ways to get the word out.  Would it be possible for me to promote it through the Knox Permaculture Guild in any way?  I suppose that the conscientious citizens on this site might know of some motivated high school or middle school students who might be interested in coming to our summit.

Let me know what you think is most appropriate!

Thanks,

Laura

At 1:51pm on June 30, 2011, Gabrielle Blake said…

Chad,

Please contact me as soon as you can couponingincriticaltimes at gmail dot com.  Today I had 2 officers come to my home address.  Within 30 seconds I answered the door and the officer said that we had requested an application and they hadn't heard anything back from us.  I said that we were planning to wait until the fall to get the permit for the coop and the spring for the hens--waiting until things were cooler to start building.  I offered to show the officer where we plan to put the coop, but she said that wasn't necessary.  At about that time another officer (the second one) came around from the back yard.  I asked what she was doing in my backyard without my permission.  (I realize that once we get the application completed that they have a right to come on our property and check, but that has not been the case yet).  She said that she was trying to locate me.  Given that I had answered the door so quickly, I can't imagine that is actually the case.  I didn't get the officer's name but explained that they had no right to go to my backyard without my permission.  Again, I had offered to escort the other officer to the back, and I'm not hiding anything.  When I phoned 311, I was given the contact info for Officer Pappas.  When she returned my call, I learned that it was SHE  who had gone into my backyard.  She said that she was sorry, but I expressed my frustration on how it was handled.  She said that they have had many people who have requested the application, not completed it, and they've shown up to find chickens on the property.  


This experience gives me the creeps.  Very Big Brother, and I'm left wondering if we should complete the application or not.  If this is how they conduct business, then I certainly do not want to give them access to my property.  

 

Your thoughts on this issue would be greatly appreciated.

Thank you!

Gabrielle

At 11:19pm on May 4, 2011, John & Kim Grubbs said…
Hi Chad, No, seeing the actual structures only reenforced the need for planning.  The structures we saw were haphazard and a bit unrefined.  While the free form style will appeal to some people it probably would not appeal to the majority.  For this to be a viable answer to the housing issue it would have to be more mainstream. The houses we saw in England had that refined quality that we are looking for. With such a low building cost, the ability to be off the grid and the potential for no mortage all that is really needed is a bit of refinement. The cob itself has a wonderful organic-ness (is that a word?) that has an appealing comfort in the structures.  We hope to incorporate the best of each building method and have a living sustainable building that people can see and touch.  It may not be THE answer but it could make a huge difference to the people working 2 jobs and still can't afford a home. We were thinking of naming the house "Hope House" because that's what it's all about, Hope.  Love your pics by the way...you may be pressed into service when the time comes!! Lol.
At 11:02am on September 29, 2010, Jennifer A. Hoffman said…
Hi Chad, Do you know of any research or demographic studies that estimate how much "local" land would have to be under cultivation if all "factory" farms were dissolved? Just wondering how much progress we would have to make to reach the break even point of US food production.
Thanks, Jennifer
At 2:31pm on September 17, 2010, Jennifer A. Hoffman said…
Chad,
In case you don't already know about these follks:
http://www.farmtoconsumer.org/
A non-profit legal defense fund for small farms trying to supply directly to the public. Champions of the local food causes...
At 6:39pm on July 28, 2010, Lyubov Vlasyuk said…
Thank you Chad !!!
God Bless you for all you hard work, that you do for as!!!
At 8:46am on July 26, 2010, Jessie Van der Laan said…
Thanks Chad!
At 10:15pm on July 25, 2010, Jessie Van der Laan said…
Chad- I am organizing a rain barrel workshop to take place during the Market Square Farmers' Market on August 14th, and still need some people to sign up. I created an event, but am not sure how to send it out to the entire permaculture group. Can you guide me or forward on the event? Thanks, Jessie
At 4:41pm on April 15, 2010, Mary Mangold said…
ok
At 11:27am on October 15, 2009, Cindy Sheldon said…
thank you. I just ordered a "put together pen" and probably won't wait for approval, but was hoping things were progressing.
 
 
 
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