Toby Hemenway Explained

Toby Hemenway
Birth Date:April 23, 1952
Occupation:Writer, educator, environmentalist
Language:English
Alma Mater:Tufts University
Genre:Non-fiction
Subject:Permaculture, peak oil, sustainability
Notableworks:Gaia's Garden: A Guide to Home-Scale Permaculture
Spouse:Kiel Hemenway

Toby Hemenway (April 23, 1952 – December 20, 2016)[1] was an American author and educator who wrote extensively on permaculture and ecological issues. He was the author of Gaia's Garden: A Guide to Home-Scale Permaculture and The Permaculture City: Regenerative Design for Urban, Suburban, and Town Resilience. He served as an adjunct professor at Portland State University, Scholar-in-Residence at Pacific University, and field director at the Permaculture Institute (USA).

Career

After obtaining a degree in biology from Tufts University, Hemenway worked for many years as a researcher in genetics and immunology, first in academic laboratories including Harvard and the University of Washington in Seattle, and then at Immunex, a major medical biotech company.

At about the time he was growing dissatisfied with the direction biotechnology was taking, he discovered permaculture. A career change followed, and Hemenway and his wife, Kiel, spent ten years creating a rural permaculture site in southern Oregon. He was the editor of Permaculture Activist, a journal of ecological design and sustainable culture, from 1999 to 2004. He moved to Portland, Oregon in 2004, and after six years of developing urban sustainability resources there, Hemenway and his wife divided their time between Sebastopol, California and western Montana.

Hemenway died of pancreatic cancer on December 20, 2016.[2]

Selected works

Books

Other

Lectures

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Mason . Clark . Toby Hemenway, leading permaculture promoter, dies at 64 . 24 August 2019 . Santa Rosa Press Democrat . 22 December 2016 . en.
  2. Web site: Update on Toby Hemenway's Battle With Cancer. December 19, 2016. Toby Hemenway.