If anyone is interested in Tom Wagner’s tour schedule, I’ve just updated this earlier post with more information. I think the published schedule is pretty complete now, unfortunately the information I have is in the local language in each place. If you don’t mind going through the French, German, Danish then English, the information is all there. If anyone has any questions, please let me know!
Tom Wagner in Ireland
Madeline of Brown Envelope Seeds left a comment on my last post reminding me and others about Tom’s workshop in Ireland. For those of you who might attend the UK workshops, the workshop in Ireland the weekend before may be an attractive alternative. You could even consider the weekend in Ireland, followed by just the Saturday in Oxford, if you wanted to get the best of everything.
In Oxford we will have other speakers and Tom will have much less time to talk and explain his breeding efforts. In addition, if you attend both days in Oxford you either have to travel back and forth or pay your own accommodation nearby. It sounds like camping is on offer from Brown Envelope Seeds. Also, since I don’t live in Oxford I’m not really in a position to host a full weekend event in a rural setting like Madeline can do in Ireland, meaning the atmosphere will be different.
The choice is yours. I’ll certainly be delighted for anyone interested to attend either or both days in the UK, and there are still spaces available. We’ll certainly have lots of interesting people, as well as things to talk about and do.
Tom Wagner
Update: 21 September — more countries added to Tom’s schedule.
Through the sponsorship of Kokopelli Seeds of France and many other hard working people, not the least of which being Lila Towle of Frøsamlerne, Tom Wagner will soon begin his trip through Europe.
Final touches are being put on Tom’s schedule, but already details of the following events have been published (sorry, these are not all in English):
Tom will conclude his European tour in Oxford, England where he will attend Oxford 2009, our annual bloggers meeting on the 25th of October and potato breeding workshop the following day.
In all Tom will visit 10 countries over the course of about two months. When I have some more specific information about his schedule, I’ll try to post some more details. In the meantime, there’s still space both at our Saturday, October 24th meeting as well as the potato breeding workshop.
Below is a description of the workshops.
Tomato and Potato workshops 2009
Tom Wagner will be holding a series of unique global workshops starting in Europe during September and October 2009.
The venues for the events will take place in France, Belgium, Switzerland, Austria, Denmark, Germany, Ireland, and England. No ONE workshop held will be identical to another. By using the internet and couriers all attendees will be not only able to make work and talk about it, but will be able to modify each other’s work electronically but also on physical pieces of potatoes and tomatoes, especially seeds.
This year, the format for the workshops will change to enable the development of ideas over a longer period. To this end, in September and October this year, there will be mostly weekend events in each location comprising lectures/presentations and informal workshops during which projects will be set to be developed over the following days, months, and even years.
The workshops are open to all but there will be very limited numbers in each location. Anyone who is familiar with past workshops will be aware that we usually try to keep the numbers of participants low so we can enter into meaningful dialogues with everyone on an individual basis. If you want to find out more about the workshops we’ve held before please visit Tom Wagner’s blog site.. http://tater-mater.blogspot.com
As these events will be more complicated than the previous ones there will likely be many questions so I will set up a FAQ page on my website over the coming weeks.
If you are seriously interested in taking part, please email your intention in English, French, German, or Danish, and do try to leave questions that you wish Tom would address.
Some of the topics that will be covered will be:
The history of Tater Mater Seeds
The development of some of Tom’s classic tomatoes such as the Green Zebra, along with dozens of other varieties that are available in the open market.
Tom’s other tomato varieties include Banana Legs, Green Grape, Vintage Vine, Green Sausage, Green Bell Pepper, Lime Green, Schimmeig Creg, Brown Flesh, Verde Claro, Gold and Green, Greenwich and Elberta Girl.
Some of Tom’s potato varieties include Viva el Sol, Adirondacksen, Azul Larga, Awol Dude, Nordic October, Baby Banana, Skagit Valley Gold.
How Tom is rapidly accumulating a large germplasm of potato clones and TPS (True Potato Seed)
Hands on demonstrations of how to cross tomato and potatoes, many times with actual plants and with video and power point presentations.
Tom will talk about how he has taken just a few varieties of potatoes and tomatoes and created a vast diversity of seeds for the future. By using heritage potatoes and tomatoes, and adding some newer releases to cross with, Tom is working with these to create tomorrow’s heirlooms.
Tom will discuss making F-1 hybrids that anyone can make over and over again. He will talk about making backcrosses and taking each year’s seed increase to the filial level of F-5 on tomatoes which indicates a rather stable line. Tom will illustrate how his potato lines have better berry production which aids hybridization efforts.
Tom will talk about the nutriceuticals of tomatoes and potatoes; the essential nutrients that these crop could contain with a bit of breeding expertise. Enhanced antioxidants, anthocyanins, carotenoids, lycopene, are but a few. Fast cooking times in his new potatoes clones that cook in 5 minutes in boiling water will be featured in his topics.
Through a variety of breeder/grower initiatives beginning with the workshops, there will likely be many cooperatives dealing with plant breeding and variety development starting with seeds of Tater Mater.
These workshops will be part of an effort to keep seeds free, legal and available for people to grow in their gardens, farmers to grow on their farms, and not controlled by major seed companies, universities or governments.
A concerted endeavor will be launched to work with local heritage varieties to incorporate them in variety improvement and to avoid GMO’s at all levels.
Potatoes can be grown from true seed and avoid the virus contamination of tuber trades. TPS is but one way to foster diversity and reach local needs for flavor, storability, yields, disease resistance, all with organic growing methods
The workshops will features many ways to look at seed extraction, seed saving, clonal selection.
Single seed descent and bulk population breeding and variety maintenance will be discussed.
The workshops will try to feature local gardens and local growers. The goal is to find ways for this to help Tom in his work and how he can help local growers in return.
Video and audio recording will likely be part of many of these workshops. Some of those may be shown at succeeding workshops to show the growth of the information exchanges. A few clips of how to cross potatoes and tomatoes may be linked to the Tater Mater blog. Many still photos will be shown of his tomato and potato varieties.
Each of these workshops will invite anyone to submit questions to answer during the workshops and/or later in an interactive format. With sufficient interpreters present, these answers will be delivered in the original language.
Workshop fees will go towards Tom’s travel in Europe and to free up important new seeds to be introduced. As Tom devotes more and more of his time to being a seed ambassador of sorts, these fees will help continue his workshops towards the future.
The goal of Tater Mater Seeds is to get young people involved in plant breeding, therefore, if Tom can be a mentor and teacher for many potential plant breeders, justice is done.
During Tom’s 56 years of breeding plants, he has not only proven that anyone can be a home garden plant breeder but will show many how they, too, can be plant breeders. His unique collection of proprietary seeds of tomato and potatoes will be a great resource for plant breeding groups in each nation.
Tom has created hundreds of varieties of tomatoes and potatoes, including potatoes totally resistant to blight. He is presently working with 100,000 lines of potatoes.
Tom started out breeding plants on his family farm near Lancaster, Kansas. He kept a family heirloom bean alive and growing each year in his gardens from a few beans his great grandmother brought to the USA in 1888. He kept growing new selections out of his breeding work even while he obtained degrees in Anthropology, Botany, Geography, and Education. His career includes farming, managing garden centers, managing greenhouses, potato buyer, potato and tomato breeder under contract, teaching, seed catalog, and a wide host of other professions. He has offered many of his creations in Farmers’ Markets and has introduced his varieties to other organic growers.
Tom stays busy with his TaterMaterSeeds forum and is a moderator on the Tomatoville.com for CrossTalk and Potato sub forums.
Tom currently lives in Everett, WA. His plots are all organic and shuns any chemicals applied to the soil.
Tom Wagner
8407 18th Ave. West
7-203
Everett, Washington 98204
Phone +1 425 512-0313
Mobile +1 425 894-1123
Limited Concessionary Places at £7.50, Book in Advance
Someone has offered to cover the cost of a few discounted places for our Oxford meeting. If anyone would like to attend for half price, the only requirement is to book in advance. First come first served.
Oxford 2009 — Costs and Discounts
Recently someone mentioned that they felt the costs of £15 per person would be too high for some people, and I would like to get everyone’s opinion on this. It’s been suggested I offer a lower concessionary rate.
Is £15 too high for you? Are you unable to attend because of this, or is it even a small problem to pay this much money? Even if you are happy paying this, do you think it might be too high for other people? Does anyone feel we would attract more people if I offered a lower rate?
I basically have no profit goals in this meeting, nor did I have any last year. In particular, I am one person with just a personal bank account, not any kind of registered organization. I’m not eager to be seen by tax authorities as making a profit, and since I have no idea what will happen next year I don’t want to keep anyone’s money for a next event that might not even happen.
I also expect, like everyone else attending, to pay my own costs, including transportation and entrance fee.
At the same time, I’m not really eager to put a lot of my own money into this, and I hope to roughly break even. This is about where we stand at the moment financially. This was my goal last year too. If significantly more or fewer people come this could change, but it’s how things look now. Honestly, as much as anything, this is to ensure these meetings can continue in the future if we choose, because if I have to put a lot of my own money into them I’ll be less likely to want to organize them.
Given everything I’ve said here, I can’t really afford to offer a reduction in the entrance fee a lot of people would want to take advantage of, and instead what I’ve focused on is keeping everything as cheap as I could for everyone.
If you look at what’s being asked for Tom Wagner’s workshops elsewhere in Europe, they are mostly all considerably more expensive, and I’m under a little pressure in this way to try to raise more money in order to help fund Tom’s breeding and touring efforts. I feel pretty strongly however, that if I did ask more than £15, some people would really be unable to come and this would significantly change the nature of our meetings, making them much more elite.
Besides making general comments here or in email, please feel free to contact me about your personal situation. If you would like a reduction or would like to attend for free, I’d be glad to hear this and will try to work something out. Likewise, if you would like to make a donation towards paying other people’s costs or to help Tom’s breeding efforts, please let me know this too.