Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Mulla's Backwards Garden

Learning agricultural wisdom by inverting conventional assumptions and discovering that nature's logic often contradicts human expectation.

Nas
Why It Matters

Nasreddin Hodja famously plants his garden upside down, watering the roots while neglecting the leaves—a paradox that teaches us to question farming dogma. In permaculture, this principle manifests as examining why monoculture fails where polyculture thrives, why we poison soil to grow food, or why we fight weeds instead of using them. The Hodja's tradition invites us to see regenerative agriculture not as modern invention but as restoration of nature's own inverted logic: we don't control the land; we align with it. By playfully reversing our assumptions about productivity, success, and control, we discover that the "backward" way—working with nature's patterns rather than against them—yields abundance. This concept transforms permaculture from a set of techniques into a joyful practice of humble observation and creative adaptation.

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