A Green Garden

Several bloggers have been talking about environmentally friendly and/or cheap gardening recently.  For example Kenny at Veggie Gardening Tips and Jane at Horticultural.  For me these topics are almost one and the same, and I thought I would do a post on this too.

The cheapest and most environmentally thing for your garden is the thing you don’t buy!  Every time you buy something it needs to be manufactured or produced, then packaged and transported.  If you buy it from a store, it needs to be stocked and marketed.  Eventually everything you buy needs to be consumed or disposed of.  All of these things use energy and other natural resources, and not buying them is always the greenest thing to do.

In principle, with the exception of a few tools and maybe lime if your soil is acidic, nothing else is needed to grow your own fruit and vegetables.

Realistically speaking, there are some other things most of us have.  For example, a shed to store our tools, maybe a greenhouse, materials to construct paths, nets, fences, raised beds, garden furniture and so on.  Almost all gardens have some of these things.  In addition, when you’re first starting you may have some special problems to take care of, for example it’s pretty common to find your garden is lacking organic material in the ground and needs some amendments at the beginning.

Here are some tips on how to avoid buying things, and if you must, how to buy the most environmentally friendly things.

Reuse and Recycle: If something in your garden needs replacing, consider using it a little while longer, or finding another use for it.  Try to find unwanted things in your neighbors gardens or elsewhere in your neighborhood, and find a new use for them in your own garden.  If you live in an agricultural are, look among the farmers.   For example straw or other plant waste can be used as mulch in your garden or to make compost.  Farmers may have unwanted tools.  Organic farmers might make a good source of manure, but be careful of getting contaminated products like this.

Avoid Toxic Materials: Many common consumer items contain toxic materials, that can contaminate your garden and/or may be a special disposal problem when you’re finished.  For example, chemicals, paint, batteries, treated wood, PVC plastic and similar things.  All of these things if burned can create serious pollution problems, and if they find their way into the ground can decompose into toxic and long lasting chemicals.  These products are also difficult or impossible to recycle.

Buy Long Lasting But Also Biodegradable Things: Buy good quality products, that will last and you won’t need to replace in a short time.  At the same time, don’t buy things that are too durable!  PVC plastic is a good example. PVC lasts virtually forever.  If it’s burned, it decomposes into PCBs and dixoins.  Realistically, it can’t be recycled.  Materials like galvanized metal are made with heavy metals, and can also contaminate your ground virtually forever.  We all need to use some of these things sometimes, but look for alternatives and think before bringing them into your garden.  Try not to buy these things, only to turn around and throw them away a year or two later.  Try to get these things used.

Make Use of Your Own Compost: Everyone needs organic material for the ground in their garden, and home made compost is the best source of this.  Most people’s gardens are self sustainable with respect to compost, once things get started.  At the beginning you may need to import material to make your compost with, or even purchase some additional compost, but this is usually only for the first year or two.  A good source of compost to get started with can often be had for free or nearly free from your city.  Most cities have compost available from discarded plant materials they have made themselves.

Start Small: For everyone a garden is a lifelong learning experience, and something that evolves over time.  Get used to the idea that things take a few years to setup.  For example, if you decide you need raised beds, try starting with one small one.  Rather than going to the store and buying a peat based product to fill up your raised bed, try just using dirt or start with just a frame and raise the dirt inside over time with home made compost.  In this way you are sure you’re buying the right raised beds from the right materials, and you’ll discover if you like using it and it’s the solution you really want over time.  Don’t try to build everything in your garden all in one year.  Don’t buy netting until you know you have a pest problem, and understand exactly what it is.  Don’t buy other materials in large quantities, until you’ve had a chance to test it and you know it’s right.

Anyone else have any other tips?

Quick Links

My computer is back online after some hardware problems since my last post.  I don’t have time for a full post, but a couple of quick links here in the meantime:

Rebsie has just done a great post on potato breeding!  If for some reason you don’t know her blog, be sure to have a look now!  For the rest of you thinking about potato breeding, be sure to have a look at these instructions.

From Tim Peters, here is a good collection of text and videos talking about various aspects of the Gulf oil spill from the perspective of a medical doctor.

Finally, TZ made a great post in this discussion forum giving a lot of resources for those who want to grow potatoes from TPS.

Tom Wagner Blight Resistant Potato Trials

With the recent announcement by the British government to move forward with GM blight resistant potato trials, it’s time to say some more about the blight resistant potato trials being organized by US potato breeder Tom Wagner.  I think there are important similarities and differences between these trials, and I’d like to explain some of them.  I’ll certainly be talking about more of these things in later posts too.

TPS Seedlings

It was a rainy day yesterday as I planted out my seedlings grown from True Potato Seed (TPS) received from Tom, so the pictures probably seem a little grey.  Rebsie of Daughter of the Soil planted hers out a few days ago, and many others across Europe are planting them in their gardens too.  This past year Tom travelled across Europe, meeting people, giving away his seeds and doing a series of workshops.

These seedlings are results of crosses made by Tom in his garden, between different historical and modern potato varieties.  There are a lot of these crosses, and for the sake of convenience these new varieties don’t yet have names but rather have been assigned a number.

These numbers and the genetics behind them are discussed by Tom in the videos I linked to above.

I was a little late in planting these seedlings out, and you can see some of the new tubers are starting to form in the little plastic pots I started the plants in.  Sorry, my camera didn’t focus properly on this.

In Simple Terms — The Genetics

The UK scientists say they are trialling two genes found in wild potato relatives, shown to result in late blight resistance.  These genes have been inserted into Desiree, a common commercial potato variety.  I have yet to verify this, but I believe we have these same two genes in our potatoes.  In this sense, our trials overlap. [edit: This probably isn’t true]

The genes in Tom Wagner’s potatoes go far beyond the trial in the UK.

Before, during and after Tom’s trip to Europe he’s been searching for and collecting the genetic materials from varieties of potatoes already shown to have blight resistance.  He’s been doing this by collecting tubers and seeds from these plants, putting them in has garden in the US, and using traditional breeding methods to cross pollinate them.  As opposed to the two genes the UK scientists are working with, Tom is working with millions of genes.

One Gene is Not Enough

One of the problems in breeding late blight resistance in potatoes is it’s a quickly mutating disease, capable of overcoming the resistance in a short time.  Many varieties created in the past are no longer resistant for this reason.  In order to overcome this problem, and create a variety that’s even more resistant, it’s necessary to use combinations of genes.  This is why the scientists in the UK are working with two and Tom is working with as many as he can find.

This is often referred to as vertical resistance or gene stacking.

The Ongoing Battle

Late blight dates back to the time of the Irish Potato famine when the potato varieties grown were susceptible to the disease and all quickly destroyed by a sudden outbreak.  The problem was made worse, because the number of varieties grown was very small, so there was little chance of any of them having natural resistance.

It’s believed late blight was originally brought to Europe in an infected tuber in a potato shipment from North America.  The disease quickly spread in Europe because the climate here provides a much more favorable environment for it.  It was also an unusually serious problem because the potato had become one of the most important sources of food for Europeans.

The approach taken to control late blight until now has been with chemical fungicides.   This approach has not been without it’s problems however.

Late blight is nearly impossible to control once the plant has become infected.  There are chemicals that can do this, but are generally considered too toxic for human consumption.  This means you have to prevent the plants from becoming infected in the first place, and so you need to begin applying chemicals when you first think an infection may be possible, often weeks before an infection would actually occur.

As late blight has mutated over the years, the chemicals used to control it have necessarily become stronger and stronger and more toxic to both people and the environment.  We are now to the point where literally tons and tons of these chemicals are used every year in Europe alone.  It’s to the point where developing stronger chemicals is no longer feasible.

A recent development in late blight mutation is it’s now reproducing sexually, and different strains can now exchange DNA.  Until now all reproduction has been asexual, meaning mutations were considerably slower.  It’s all but assured future mutations of late blight will now occur much more rapidly.

Two-Gene vs. Multi-Gene Approach

The two gene approach taken by the UK scientists has a high chance of resulting in late blight resistance. The real question however, is how long this resistance will last.

The argument of course, is when the resistance of this variety is no longer adequate, they will look for more genes in wild potato relatives and create a new GM variety.  If necessary, they can use more than two genes.  This approach however looks an awful lot like the fungicides now being used.  As these scientists move from one gene to the next, work their way through all the combinations they think of, eventually they will reach the end when it no longer works.

In a case like this, the interactions between all the genes are not likely to ever be fully understood.  The UK scientists will only be working with genes or combinations of genes they can single out as being important in existing varieties, and they won’t see everything.

Tom’s multi gene approach on the other hand is much more likely to be sustainable, and is more likely to show functional resistance on farms.

By using Tom’s approach an unknown number of genes will be involved in the resistance.  By taking existing resistant varieties, using the combinations of their genes in their entirety, all genes involved in that resistance can be used, not just the ones that can be specifically identified.  In addition, by creating crosses with several different resistant varieties, all the genes from all the varieties can be used in their totality and in different combinations.

By creating a number of resistant varieties in this way, then growing them in different places and continuing the process of crossing new resistant varieties as they appear, new resistant genes will be discovered.  This is in part because there will be natural mutations in the plants themselves creating new genes, but also previously unknown ones will be found.  This ongoing process is much more likely to produce late blight resistance in the long run, and the chance of ‘running out of genes’ like what will happen eventually with the GM approach is significantly reduced.

In addition by working with a number of different varieties resistant to late blight in different ways, all at the same time, the chance of losing the entire season’s potato harvest like what happened during the Irish Potato Famine is significantly reduced.

Other Benefits of Biodiversity

There is another very important benefit to Tom’s multi gene approach.  If one picture is worth 1000 words, have a look at some of Tom’s recent potato lines (click to enlarge):

Which would you rather eat, one of these or a GM Desiree potato?

One of the things Tom likes doing is working with older varieties that were favorites among our ancestors.  For example, Tom has Irish roots and likes to work with the Lumper potato which was the most widely grown at the time of the Irish Potato Famine.  In fact he’s created a number of blight resistant varieties using the Lumper as a basis.

By using Tom’s traditional breeding methods, it’s possible to recover traits in popular old varieties, and bring them back into new ones.

Some Other Important Differences

How about we talk security fences here?  Here’s a picture of my security fence:

It’s a 4 ft hedge behind a shallow canal.

Unlike the £20.000 8 ft security fence and 24 hour security guard the scientists in the UK have, I only have the good graces of the other allotmenteers in my complex.  Someone is usually around in the day, but otherwise my plot is unattended.

Another difference is funding.  The costs of everyone participating in Tom’s trials are paid out of pocket.  Tom in particular has devoted his whole life to his work, has never been paid royalties for his varieties, and uses huge amounts of his family’s money to pay his costs.  If we had the money invested in the UK security fence alone, we could dramatically expand our trials not to mention offset some of our expenses.

A Specific Response to the UK Scientists

In the media recently were some statements made by people involved in the UK trials, and I wanted to respond to one of them.

From the BBC:

Professor Jones said that the trial was well within the biosecurity parameters required in order for permission to be granted.

“The rules are that the field trial has to be at least 20 metres from adjacent conventional potato fields,” he said.

“Very hypothetically, if a few pollen grains make it from our GM potatoes to some cultivated potatoes, given that we do not eat the fruit but the tubers, there is absolutely no way that the DNA we use can enter the human food chain.”

“There are also no wild relatives of potato in Europe that it could cross (breed) with.”

I think the argument could be made that contamination from the field trial is unlikely, but the idea of 20 metres being adequate isolation is totally absurd.  First the variety used in this trial, Desiree, produces large amounts of pollen and is a very poor choice in terms of reducing contamination.  Insects can carry pollen from potatoes large distances, and if these potatoes are ever grown commercially the contamination would be widespread.  If the scientists were concerned about spreading contamination, why not use a variety that doesn’t produce pollen?

A male sterile variety, for example British Queen, could easily pick up a single grain of pollen from this GM variety, turning it into a seed ball that could get lost in the field and produce weeds for years to come.

Potato tubers themselves are always left behind in farmers fields, which then turn into weeds.  Potatoes by their nature are a weedy plant.  There may not be potato relatives growing wild in Europe, but there are plenty of possibilities for contamination.

The spreading of this sort of contamination threatens the breeding work I’ve laid out here, and puts the entire future of organic potatoes in jeopardy.

GM Blight Resistant Potatoes

The first trial plantings of GM blight resistant potatoes will begin this year in Norfolk, UK.  The approval of this was one of the first actions of the new Environment Secretary, who is part of the UK’s new coalition government.

For years the food industry has been lying to us by saying GM potatoes were needed to combat Late Blight, when the truth is these potatoes can be developed using conventional breeding techniques instead.

Update: For some comments from Tom, have a look at his discussion forum here:

http://tatermater.proboards.com/index.cgi?board=general&action=display&thread=252