Seed Network News January 2009

Lots of seeds, more gardeners needed!

Consider getting some or all your garden seeds from the Bloggers Seed Network (blog not required), rather than buying them.  There are thousands of varieties available for the asking!

Of course if you have seeds to offer, you’re also very welcome to join the seed network and share them!

It’s important to understand people have one overwhelming reason for offering their seeds to other gardeners, they really, genuinely, want to share them and see them grown in other people’s gardens.  You aren’t imposing on anyone by asking for seeds.  Of course you should offer to send a self addressed stamped envelope if you live in the same country, and/or offer to send a small payment to cover the costs of sending the seeds.  If you don’t have enough money to afford to pay for the seeds, ask anyway, because some people are willing to send them for free.

The expectation usually is however that the person receiving the seeds intends to save seeds themselves and reshare them with others.  You also need to understand what you want.  Don’t just contact someone in the seed network and ask them to send you some seeds!  You have to ask for specific varieties you want to grow.

Different from Public Seed Exchanges

Please understand this network is different from most public seed exchanges.  See my last post as an example of this.  In general people offering seeds via this seed network are not allowed to share half used packets of commercial seeds.  Nearly all of the seeds offered are homegrown and self saved.  All of the seeds you get from this seed network are suitable for growing and resaving!

Commercial seeds on the other hand are generally not accurately labelled, and you won’t know for at least two years if they are in fact suitable for saving because you will have to first grow the plants and save seeds, then try regrowing those seeds and seeing what happened. It’s the intention of most commercial seed companies to cause confusion over the suitability of their seeds for saving, because they would like gardeners who try to fail and become discouraged!  Seed companies make more money when you go back each year and buy more.

Never believe a seed company is selling you seeds suitable for saving unless they have a conspicuous and unambiguous public statement saying ALL of the seeds they offer are suitable for seed saving.  There are very few companies like this around, and you have to hunt for them!  See the links section of this blog for some ideas.

While it’s possible a few members of this seed network may have commercial activities alongside of offering seeds, most are just gardeners offering to share seeds from their own garden.  You won’t be encouraged to spend money on other things, and you don’t need to pay an entrance fee to participate.  Nothing but no-frill seeds, delivered to your door!

Newest Members of the Network

There have been several new members this month.  Lots of people offering tomatoes!

Gardening Fool has a mix of ornamentals and edible plants, but if you read about the stuff being working on, there are more edibles in the pipeline.

Agrarian Grrl’s Muse Located in the Annapolis valley in Nova Scotia, Canada.  A great blog too!

Crazytomato Almost a neighbor of mine, here in the Netherlands, has a great looking collection of vegetable seeds including many tomatoes!

Paquebot Located in Wisconsin, USA, has loads of tomatoes!

Saith Ffynnon Farm Located in north coastal Wales, UK (!) is offering a number of seeds collected from the wild in his area, including a number of edible plants.

Blue Ribbon Tomatoes Located in kentucky, USA, Maria is offering a number of really exciting local heirloom tomatoes!  She also has a great blog.

6th London Charity Potato Fair and Seed Exchange

Press Release from the Organizers

6TH LONDON CHARITY POTATO FAIR AND SEED EXCHANGE

Sunday 25 January, 10am – 4pm
Harris Girls Academy,
Homestall Road, London SE22 0NR.

The countdown’s on for the 6th London Charity Potato Fair. Once something of a starchy event with the slightest whiff of green anorak, six years on it’s become one of the highlights of the London horticultural calendar.

Last year 750 people came to choose from the 100 + varieties of potato, swap seeds and ideas and pick up tips on how to grow the perfect crop. This time, organiser Lindsay Wright expects more than 1000, such is the enthusiasm for growing your own. “We have a real cross section, from people who can’t tell a potato from a cabbage to those who have been growing veg since they could walk,” he explains. “And they travel from far and wide. Northern Ireland is the furthest anyone has come from in person but I have also sent pots to Finland.”

Part of the attraction is the sheer exuberance of the event and the opportunity to buy individual tubers, giving people the chance to be adventurous with what they grow. The seed exchange is another draw, particularly in these times of waste not want not. “It’s not rocket science,” says Lindsay. “Bring some seeds and swap them for something else and if you haven’t got seeds, a donation to Hope and Homes for Children will do the trick.”

Volunteers from local gardening clubs and organisations including Shogg, Lambeth Horticultural Society and Roots & Shoots will be on hand to give advice and answer questions, “I am proud to say that so far no question hasn’t been answered satisfactorily,” says Lindsay.

Snappy garden accessories from wellies to plant pots, unusual and heritage seeds, including older varieties of fruit and vegetables, mushroom spawn and plants will be on sale from specialist suppliers Thomas Etty, Pennard Plants, Alleyn Park Garden Centre, Dulwich Pot & Plant Centre and the Rustic Mushroom Company.

The sixth Charity Potato Fair and Seedy Sunday takes place on Sunday 25 January 2009 from 10.00am – 4.00pm at Harris Girls Academy, Homestall Road, London SE22 0NR.

All profits from the fair will go to the Hope and Homes for Children charity, which works in 13 countries in Eastern Europe and Africa. The work varies from country to country, from closing orphanages in Romania to supporting AIDS orphans in Africa. More details on www.hopeandhomes.org .

Entrance is £1.50; free for under 16s. Gardeners, with or without seeds to swap and non-gardeners are all very welcome. Teas and refreshments are available. For further information visit www.potatofair.org.

Agriculture is Single Most Important Contributor to Climate Change

Over the last few months I’ve been coming across little bits of information that really point to agriculture as the most important aspect to climate change, and I thought I would put some of them together here in a post.

The Numbers

Just where are all the greenhouse gases coming from is not as easy a question to answer as you might think.  The working diagram seems to be this from the World Resources Institute.  Looking at the diagram one can see that the agriculture sector accounts for 13.5% of greenhouse gases, but at the same time deforestation accounts for 18.3%.  It’s clear some portion of deforestation is connected to agriculture, but how much?  Where do biofuels fit in here?  Other sectors like transportation and industrial processes also clearly play an important role in agriculture.  Even though it’s not possible to clearly see agriculture’s role in this diagram, some interesting comparisons with other sectors can still be made.

According to Dr R. K. Pachauri’s presentation notes, on the website linked to below in the meat section of this post: Green house gas emissions from livestock production are 80% of emissions from agriculture and 18% of all green house gas emissions from human activities.  For these he sites an FAO report from 2006 I haven’t been able to locate.

From these figures it’s possible to deduce that green house gas emissions from agriculture are 22.5% of all those related to human activities.  Many of these gases are not just CO2, but other more environmentally damaging gases like N2O and CH4.

Emissions Are Only Part of the Story

Beyond the actual emissions from agriculture, there’s another important factor to consider.  Agricultural land is one of the most important sources of carbon sequestration on the planet, and our current system of chemical intensive agriculture destroys the soil’s ability to store carbon.  This is because the soil contains an enormous number of microorganisms and is an ecosystem within itself, but one fungus in particular is largely responsible for sequestering the carbon, which can’t grow in soil damaged by agricultural chemicals.

Reforming our current system of agriculture to one that uses organic methods would likely turn an industry that’s a net producer of 22.5% of the worlds man made greenhouse gases to one that’s a net consumer of green house gases.  This change is unlikely to reduce agricultural output.

How can it be that if we got rid of all the agricultural chemicals there would be no reduction in yields?  It’s the simple fact that most modern crop varieties were bred to need chemicals, for no reason except corporate profits.  When a company like Monsanto or Dow sells both chemicals and seeds, it’s natural when they create a new variety they would want to promote their own chemical products too.  Therefore they breed their new varieties specially to not be able to grow without these chemicals.  This is one of the reasons the same company who sells Round-Up sells Round-Up ready seeds, and so on.  There’s no credible evidence to suggest commercial varieties are any more productive as a whole than properly maintained non-commercial varieties which don’t need the chemicals in the first place.

Anne of Agrarian Grrl’s Muse made a great post on this and the associated Rodale Institute report.  Be sure to check out the video.

According to the report if the US switched it’s corn and soy bean acreage to organic production, this alone would meet 73% of it’s Kyoto Protocol obligations.  And again, there’s likely to be no significant loss of crop yields in the long run.

When carbon is sequestered into the ground one of the results is higher quality soil, and associated higher yields.  Many gardeners know sequestered carbon in the form of compost, and even non-gardeners know the term topsoil.  As well as reducing global warming, this would be a very good thing for agriculture in the long run, building up our topsoils and putting carbon into the ground.  There would be other benefits.  Carbon would significantly improve the soil’s ability to retain water, meaning greater tolerance to drought.  This would also significantly reduce N2O emissions (from livestock), because nitrogen binds to carbon when it’s in the ground.

Perennial vs Annual

One of the characteristics of modern agriculture are large swaths of farmland planted with mono-cultures, then plowed under at the end of each year and replanted the next.  These are called annual crops.

It turns out annual crops are significant green house gas producers.  In the process of plowing, the ground is damaged and sequestered carbon is released.  In addition more work needs to be done by tractors which also emit CO2.  The plants are weaker, with shallower roots, and more prone to diseases and drought.

Perennial crops on the other hand, those which stay in the ground for more than one year, are more disease and drought resistant, and generally stronger plants. They stand up better to weeds, because they maintain their ground cover and more firmly establish themselves into the ground.   Their deeper root systems tend to sequester more carbon, in addition they need less tractor work and chemicals.

The Seed Ambassadors recently posted a paper discussing perennial grains.

Biochar

This is something that’s been in the news lately, and a number of blog posts have appeared on the topic.

Basically biochar is made with a process called pyrolysis which involves burning farm waste at low temperature with reduced oxygen.  The result is something similar to charcoal, and when buried in the ground decomposes into soil with a very high carbon content.  While a lot is still unknown about it at this point, it’s believed this is a system that can be used to sequester large amounts of carbon quickly into the ground, building up fertility rapidly in the process.

Alan of Bishop’s Homegrown, as well as publishing several posts on the topic, is making his own.  He refers to the ground made with biochar as Terra Pretta, the name given to the fertile ground created by an ancient civilization with this technique in the Amazon rainforest.

Biochar is already attracting the attention of big business.  Anne recently posted about trojan efforts at producing Terra Pretta, requiring fossil fuel inputs!

It’s clear there’s a lot of potential for turning organic farm waste into sequestered carbon and rich agricultural land using this technique, and a lot more work needs to be done on it.

Meat

I posted on this controversial subject before, and I noticed a tense silence amongst my readers, resulting in only a few polite comments.

18% of greenhouse gases related to human activity comes from producing meat, the largest single source.  In addition, the gases like N2O and CH4 that come from livestock, are some of the most significant contributors to global warming.  While it’s certainly possible for people to eat meat if they want to, the rate it’s being produced and the production methods used are seriously damaging the planet.  It seems pretty far-fetched to think we can continue as we are, even increase production to meet demand in emerging economies like China, while at the same time addressing global warming.  People who eat meat need to eat a lot less of it.

If you’re interested, the person who recently made this statement and attracted attention to this issue is the chair of the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Dr. R. K. Pachauri.  He has a blog!  He also made a post about his statement and the controversy it caused, and for those of you who showed restraint here and didn’t say anything negative, you can go there and blast him with a comment personally!  In fact, you can be the first, because at the time of my writing this post there were 34 comments on his post, none of them negative.  Now we just need to convince him to set up an RSS feed…

Agriculture Opted Out

In Europe both the automotive and airline industries tried to opt out of the Kyoto Protocol green house gas emission limits, and there was an outcry.  They have since been brought back into the carbon credits trading scheme.

On the other hand the agriculture ministers announced they were opting out of these same limits, and it seems like there wasn’t a single voice of opposition.  For some reason it seems the most natural thing in the world that something sacred like our food production should not have to change, even though reform of the agriculture sector would probably by itself meet almost all of Europe’s obligations under the Kyoto Protocol.

In fact Europe is very unlikely to be able to meet it’s obligation under the Kyoto Protocol without significant participation from the agricultural sector.

What Can You Do?

Eat less meat.

Grow your own organic vegetables, or buy them locally from someone you trust.

Grow heritage/heirloom plant varieties in your vegetable garden, save your own seeds and learn basic plant breeding.  The resulting skills and plants are going to be needed in the next century.

Compost your household and garden waste when possible.

Use common sense when driving a car, travelling by plane and heating your house.

Tell your politicians it’s not our position as consumers to have something trivial like low energy light bulbs forced upon us, rather it’s their responsibility to save the planet by reforming agriculture in a meaningful way!

While you’re at it, tell your politicians we don’t want biofuels made in a way that results in net CO2 production, reduces available land for food based agriculture, results in environmental pollution, results in deforestation or involves any new technologies like GMOs, synbio or nanotechnologies without proper regulation and long term testing.

Seed Network: Seed Saving and Selection

This post is a follow up to the last two posts.

The last concept in seed saving is that it’s very important to save seeds from the right plant or plants.  This is the easy one!

Always save seeds from the best plant or plants available

That’s it!  What exactly makes the best plant is simply what you think it is.  The strongest plant or most productive.  If you can taste it without distroying the plant, then the best tasting plant.

It’s always best to save seeds from a number of plants, in order to help maintain a good sized gene pool, but if there’s one plant that really stands out or is exciting for some reason, be sure to save seeds from that one apart from the others for separate replanting.  Sometimes new plant varieties are discovered this way!

Many people think when they plant seeds for something all the plants will grow to be exactly the same, but this is only true with (commercial) f1 hybrid plants.  If you’re growing your own self saved seeds, seeds saved in another garden or purchased OP or heirloom seeds, there will always be small differences in the plants.  Perhaps most of these differences will be too small to notice but often there will be good or bad differences that stand out from the others.  It’s very important to preserve the good and discard the bad!

All plants have a sort of genetic drift over time, that left on it’s own will result in plants that are less productive with an accumulation of undesirable traits.

In fact most varieties need periodic ‘grow outs’, where large numbers of plants are grown and seeds selectively saved, in order to clean them up and revitalize them.  By doing this a litte bit in your garden as you go along, you help keep the variety healthy.

DIY plant breeding by selection!

While all plants have chance genetic variations from time to time, plant breeders intentionally create new varieties by cross pollinating two or more plants and creating hybrids.  Once this is done, the genetics of the plants become unstable for several generations.  Arguably the first few generations more plant breeding skill is needed because this is when selection is made for very specific traits.

After the first few generations the basic plant is there, with the traits the plant breeder choose, but the plants are still somewhat unstable.  This is an ideal time for you to take the plant into your garden and finish off the breeding!  At this point the number of chance genetic variations is much higher than usual, so it’s much easier for you to grow a few plants in your garden and choose your favorites to save seeds from.  In this way, you develop your own variety custom made for your own garden.

I’m currently aware of two plant breeders offering plants at this stage:

Ben of Real Seeds

Alan of Hip-Gnosis Seed Development

I’m sure there are others around offering similar seeds, so don’t be afraid to look around the Internet yourself.

Seed Network: Outbreeding and Inbreeding Depression

This post is simply a follow up from the last post.

I think confusion over cross-pollination and inbreeding depression are what lead most people to give up on seed saving, but it’s really not a difficult concept!  It really comes down to what Real Seeds say in their seed saving guide:

Do your plants breed in groups?

If yes, then you need to make sure the group is large enough and distinct groups are isolated from one another (these two concepts always go together).  If no, than you have a lot less to worry about when you save seeds.

If your plants breed in groups, then they are referred to as outbreeding plants.  Somehow the pollen from one plant travels to nearby plants, usually by way of insects or the wind. Plants that breed in groups are genetically predisposed to needing a large gene pool to stay healthy.

If your plants do not breed in groups, they are referred to as inbreeding plants.  Inbreeding plants usually have entirely self-contained flowers with both male and female elements, the pollen doesn’t leave the plant and they pollinate themselves.  These kinds of plants are genetically predisposed to being tolerant of a small gene pool.

The only slightly confusing part of all of this is that nature is not usually so kind as to give us something black and white, and there are lots of in between situations.  Plants are usually referred to as mostly inbreeding or mostly outbreeding.

Inbreeding Depression

If you save seeds from plants that breed in groups, with too small of a group, you will eventually have problems with inbreeding depression.  This can result in plants that are no longer suitable for growing, but it often takes a number of generations for these problems to emerge.

This can be fine if you’re only saving seeds for your self, and only intend to grow them for a couple of generations.  On the other hand, this can be a serious problem if you share the seeds with someone else who is unaware of the problem.

Plants that do not breed in groups do not develop this problem as easily, but it’s always a good idea to save seeds from a couple of plants to help avoid the problem.

Start with inbreeding plants

When you begin seed saving, you should start with plants that are nearly or totally inbreeding and therefore do not need to breed in a group with nearby plants and do not often accidentily cross pollinate with others.

Popular examples of this are tomatoes, beans and peas.