“…Permaculture is a term formed from the words “permanent” and “agriculture”, coined by Bill Mollison and David Holmgren in the 1970s and 1980s [ [6] , [7] , [8] , [9] , [10] ], is acquiring ubiquity as a natural resource management strategy [ 6 , 11 ]. Permaculture is the product of an innovative amalgamation of frameworks thinking and planning based on a knowledge of natural ecosystem processes, conventional small-scale mixed agriculture, low-influence innovation, and redistributive civil rights into a versatile, interlinked dynamic design system for designing and implementing a self-sustaining human network [ 6 , 10 , 12 ]. Its ideas and strategies are fundamentally casual, different, and unregulated, and they are disseminated through networks of practitioners [ 9 ].…”