Designing in Iran: What the Land and the People Taught Me

In 2007, Geoff was invited by Iran’s Ministry of Agriculture to teach composting and permaculture design to agricultural advisors. What followed surprised him. A single compost demonstration spread across the country and helped catalyze a national shift toward organic agriculture. In this reflective episode, Geoff describes ancient Iranian technologies like qanats (underground water canals), traditional water-harvesting orchards, desert restoration techniques, and innovative ways farmers combined permaculture ideas with thousands of years of local knowledge. Listen in as the team explores culture, ecology, and regenerative design in one of the world’s oldest agricultural civilizations.

Watch the video episode here.

Key Takeaways:

00:00 – 01:00: Introduction Geoff introduces his 2007 invitation to Iran by the Ministry of Agriculture to teach permaculture and composting.

01:00 – 04:30: Ancient irrigation still in use Iran still builds and maintains qanats, underground canals that transport mountain water to farms with almost no evaporation.

04:30 – 12:00: One compost pile becomes a national program The compost system Geoff taught was trialed across agricultural districts and eventually spread nationwide.

12:00 – 16:00: The “Doctor Tamarisk” story An Iranian agricultural researcher restored salt-damaged land by planting tamarisk trees and using their biomass to gradually reduce soil salinity.

16:00 – 20:00: Radical desert restoration ideas Discussion of an experimental technique reportedly used to stabilize dunes with crude oil mulch.

20:00 – 22:00: Ancient pistachio orchards Thousands of pistachio trees grown with half-circle water harvesting earthworks — a design used for centuries.

22:00 – 32:30: Sanctions and agricultural independence Geoff suggests Iran’s isolation helped preserve traditional farming knowledge.

32:30 – 35:00: What qanats actually are Detailed explanation of the underground canal system and how it moves water using gravity.

35:00 – 37:00: Passive cooling architecture Traditional Iranian buildings use wind chimneys and underground water tanks to cool homes without electricity.

37:00 – 46:00: Integrating permaculture into date palm plantations Farmers added swale-style trenches filled with compost to dramatically increase yields.

46:00 – 50:00: Ancient gabion flood systems Stone check dams used to capture desert silt and create extremely fertile crop zones.

50:00 – End: Why long-term infrastructure matters A qanat that lasts 2,000 years spreads its energy cost across centuries.