Urban Livestock Integration: Dylan Kennedy, Cincinnati, 3/14
By Cincinnati Permaculture Institute / Green Umbrella
PermaNews Brief
Key Takeaways
This workshop explores integrating livestock into urban permaculture for sustainability and food production in city environments.
- Learn practical urban livestock integration strategies.
- Enhance soil health and food production with urban animals.
- Discover solutions for space, zoning, and ethics.
- Explore multi-species synergies in urban settings.
- Connect with broader permaculture design principles.
Why It Matters
Integrating livestock into urban areas can significantly boost local food systems, improve soil fertility, and contribute to a more resilient urban environment.
What to Do Next
Research local zoning laws regarding urban livestock before planning any integration.
Recommended for: Anyone in an urban environment interested in practical ways to introduce animals into their permaculture designs for increased sustainability and food production.
The 'Livestock in the City: Urban Animal Integration' event, led by Dylan Kennedy, is organized by the Cincinnati Permaculture Institute in collaboration with Green Umbrella. Scheduled for Saturday, March 14, 2026, from 12:00 PM to 4:00 PM, this workshop focuses on integrating livestock into urban permaculture systems. It explores practical strategies for incorporating animals like chickens, goats, worms, and others into city environments to enhance sustainability, soil health, and food production. The event aligns with the institute's mission to educate individuals and organizations on permaculture principles, catalyzing a resilient culture in the Cincinnati bioregion through symbiotic, regenerative practices. Participants will learn about animal systems in permaculture design, drawing from related courses like the Winter Weekend Permaculture Design Certification (PDC), which covers animal integration alongside topics such as ethics, water harvesting, earthworks, trees, soils, and aquaculture. The Cincinnati Permaculture Institute, based in the Cincinnati area, hosts various educational opportunities including hands-on workshops, garden tours, potlucks, and full 72-hour PDC certifications at sites like Treasure Lake Regenerative Education Site in Petersburg, KY. This particular event emphasizes urban applications, addressing challenges like space constraints, zoning, and ethical animal husbandry in dense populations. Dylan Kennedy, the featured instructor, brings expertise in urban livestock management, likely covering feeding strategies using local resources, waste cycling for compost, predator protection, and multi-species synergies that mimic natural ecosystems. The workshop builds on the institute's broader activities, such as volunteering at the Growing Value Edible Plant Nursery, tree identification walks, and community gatherings like Gather & Grow potlucks. The nursery offers rare edible perennials suited to the local bioregion, complementing animal integration by providing fodder and habitat plants. With a vision of building community resilience one plant and one person at a time, CPI leverages sites like Wooden Shoe Hollow for nature immersion and Treasure Lake for advanced permaculture demonstrations, including 20+ years of forest enhancement for biodiversity and wild food abundance. Early bird registrations for related PDCS closed January 2, 2026, with regular sign-ups through February 13, indicating high demand for such programs. This event on March 14 directly precedes other activities like the Spring Grove Tree ID Walk on March 28, fostering ongoing learning. Attendees can expect interactive sessions on ethical foraging, microclimate design, and social-economic permaculture, preparing urban dwellers to create productive, self-sustaining homesteads. The institute encourages following their Facebook and email list for updates, underscoring community building as core to their approach. Overall, this workshop empowers participants with actionable insights for resilient urban living, harmonizing human needs with ecological health in the tri-state area.
Source: greenumbrella.org
Related Analysis
- Composting Advice Shifts From Chemistry to Microbial Biology — Several sources suggest composting guidance is pivoting from nutrient ratios toward microbial ecology—reframing what "go…
- Does Growing Your Own Food Actually Save Money? The Real Numbers — Most home gardens save money by year two — but only if the right crops are planted. Herbs and salad greens deliver 5–10x…
Related on PermaNews
- Ernst Götsch's Cacao Syntropy: Master Agroforestry Now (How-To Guide)
- Finnish Off-Grid: Rocket Mass Heater Performance in Greenhouse (Case Study)
- Berlins schwimmende Gärten: Permakultur auf dem Wasser (Case Study)
- Rodale Report 2025: Thermal Mass Boost in Solar Greenhouses (Case Study)
- AUTarcaMatricultura La Palma: Permakultur & Energieautarkie (How-To Guide)
- Earthaven Ecovillage: 30 Years Off-Grid with Hydro & Solar (Video)
Explore more in Food Systems & Growing — the full hub for this knowledge area.