Keyline design is a landscaping technique of maximizing the beneficial use of the water resources of a tract of land. The "keyline" is a specific topography feature related to the natural flow of water on the tract. Keyline design is a system of principles and techniques of developing rural and Cityscape to optimize use of their water resources.
Australian farmer and engineer P. A. Yeomans invented and developed Keyline design in his books The Keyline Plan, The Challenge of Landscape, Water For Every Farm, and The City Forest.
Keyline designs include irrigation dams equipped with through-the-wall lockpipe systems, gravity feed irrigation, stock water, and yard water. Graded earthen channels may be interlinked to broaden the catchment areas of high dams, conserve the height of water, and transfer rainfall runoff into the most efficient high dam sites. Roads follow both ridge lines and water channels to provide easier movement across the land. Keyline Designs website
Keyline design considers these elements in planning the placement of water storage features, roads, trees, edifices, and fences. On undulating land, keyline design involves identifying , , and natural water courses and designing with them in mind in order to optimize water storage sites. Constructing interconnecting channels may be part of such optimization.
The identified natural water lines delineate the possible locations for the various less permanent elements, e. g. roads, fences, trees, and edifices, which if so located would help optimize the natural potential of the land in question.
Cultivation conforming to Keyline design for is carried out parallel to any suitable contour, but only on the high side of the contour's guide line. This process develops a pattern of off-contour cultivation in which all the rip marks made in the soil slope down toward the center of the ridge. This pattern of cultivation allows more time for water to infiltrate. Cultivation following the Keyline pattern also enables controlled flood irrigation of undulating land, which increases the rate of development of deep, fertility soil.
In many nations, including Australia, it is important to optimize the infiltration of rainfall, and Keyline cultivation accomplishes this while delaying the concentration of runoff that could damage the land. Yeomans' technique differs from traditional contour plowing in several important respects. Random contour plowing also becomes off-contour but usually with the opposite effect on runoff, namely causing it to quickly run off and concentrate in . The limitations of the traditional system of soil conservation, with its "safe disposal" approach to farm water, was an important motivation to develop Keyline design.
Darren J. Doherty has extensive global experience in Keyline design, development, management, and education. He uses Keyline as the basis for his Regrarians framework, which he considers a revision and synthesis of Keyline design, permaculture, holistic management, and several other innovative, human ecological frameworks into a coherent process-based system of design and management of regenerative economies.
A topographical example of Keyline design is available at ( Fryers Forest on WikiMaps).
Keyline design also includes principles of rapidly enhancing soil fertility. They are explored in Priority One by P. A. Yeomans' son, Allan. Yeomans and his sons were also instrumental in the design and production of special plows and other equipment for Keyline cultivation.
These individually designed lines enhance water infiltration, reduce erosion, and allow for overflow management during extreme weather. The system also integrates well with agroforestry and parallel tillage, helping maintain operational efficiency.
German federal agencies have recognized this adaptation as a valuable tool for climate-resilient land use. It is promoted for its ability to improve soil moisture retention, limit erosion, and buffer the effects of droughts and heavy rains.
The system has been applied by farms such as Schreiber GbR in northern Germany and is being explored in other regions. Research and field trials in Lower Saxony and Hesse confirm its effectiveness in reducing surface runoff and supporting water-retentive agroforestry systems.
Documented benefits include improved integration of tree crops, enhanced water retention, and more stable yields under climate stress.
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